Negotation to Nevermore

A Concordance to the Collected Essays of Ralph Waldo Emerson
Compiled by Eugene F. Irey

negotiation, n. (1)

    FSLC 11.208 13 Why in the name of common sense and the peace of mankind is not [abolition] made the subject of instant negotiation and settlement?

negotiations, n. (1)

    GoW 4.266 15 It is believed...the negotiations of a caucus and the practising on the prejudices and facility of country-people to secure their votes in November,--is practical and commendable.

negro, adj. (14)

    LLNE 10.329 18 The warm swart Earth-spirit which made the strength of past ages...warm negro ages of sentiment and vegetation,-all gone;...
    EWI 11.101 8 If there be any man...who would not so much as part with his ice-cream, to save [a race of men] from rapine and manacles, I think I must not hesitate to satisfy that man that also his cream and vanilla are safer and cheaper by placing the negro nation on a fair footing than by robbing them.
    EWI 11.101 27 In the oldest temples of Egypt, negro captives are painted on the tombs of kings, in such attitudes as to show that they are on the point of being executed;...
    EWI 11.102 11 ...the secrets of slaughter-houses and infamous holes that cannot front the day, must be ransacked, to tell what negro slavery has been.
    EWI 11.103 14 Very sad was the negro tradition, that the Great Spirit, in the beginning offered the black man, whom he loved better than the buckra, or white, his choice of two boxes...
    EWI 11.103 20 The buckra box was full up with pen, paper and whip, and the negro box with hoe and bill;...
    EWI 11.107 25 Six Quakers met in London on the 6th of July, 1783...to consider what step they should take for the relief and liberation of the negro slaves in the West Indies...
    EWI 11.114 17 The reception of [emancipation] by the negro population [of the West Indies] was equal in nobleness to the deed.
    EWI 11.119 5 Sir Lionel Smith defended the poor negro girls, prey to the licentiousness of the [Jamaican] planters;...
    EWI 11.119 9 ...[Sir Lionel Smith] defended the negro women [in Jamaica];...
    EWI 11.126 11 It was very easy for manufacturers...to see that...if the slaves [in the West Indies] had wages, the slaves would be clothed...and negro women love fine clothes as well as white women.
    EWI 11.141 24 It now appears that the negro race is, more than any other, susceptible of rapid civilization.
    FSLC 11.186 13 ...America, the most prosperous country in the Universe, has the greatest calamity in the Universe, negro slavery.
    HCom 11.344 14 One mother said, when her son was offered the command of the first negro regiment, If he accepts it, I shall be as proud as if I had heard that he was shot.

Negro, adj. (1)

    LT 1.269 7 The leaders of the crusades against War, Negro slavery...are the right successors of Luther, Knox...

negro, n. (30)

    MR 1.232 3 The abolitionist has shown us our dreadful debt to the southern negro.
    MR 1.237 16 ...it is...the butcher, the negro...who have intercepted the sugar of the sugar...
    ET4 5.48 4 Race in the negro is of appalling importance.
    Ill 6.311 21 ...the farmer in the field, the negro in the rice-swamp...ascribe a certain pleasure to their employment, which they themselves give it.
    Civ 7.20 6 ...in Africa the negro of to-day is the negro of Herodotus.
    Civ 7.20 7 ...in Africa the negro of to-day is the negro of Herodotus.
    WD 7.163 16 We may yet find a rose-water that will wash the negro white.
    Res 8.143 24 ...every manufacturer and producer in the North has an interest in protecting the negro as the consumer of his wares.
    QO 8.199 18 ...does it not look...as if we stood...in a circle of intelligences that reached...back to the first negro, who...gave a shriller sound or name for the thing he saw and dealt with?
    EWI 11.102 5 From the earliest time, the negro has been an article of luxury to the commercial nations.
    EWI 11.102 27 For the negro, was the slave-ship to begin with...
    EWI 11.103 21 The buckra box was full up with pen, paper and whip, and the negro box with hoe and bill; and hoe and bill for the negro to this day.
    EWI 11.104 13 ...if we saw the runaways hunted with bloodhounds into swamps and hills; and, in cases of passion, a planter throwing his negro into a copper of boiling cane-juice,-if we saw these things with eyes, we too should wince.
    EWI 11.108 6 John Woolman of New Jersey...was uneasy in his mind when he was set to write a bill of sale of a negro, for his master.
    EWI 11.111 5 Looking in the face of his master by the negro was held to be violence by the [West Indian] island courts.
    EWI 11.116 22 On the next Monday morning [after emancipation in the West Indies], with very few exceptions, every negro on every plantation was in the field at his work.
    EWI 11.119 24 Parliament was compelled to pass additional laws for the defence and security of the negro [in the West Indies]...
    EWI 11.123 21 It was, or it seemed the dictate of trade, to keep the negro down.
    EWI 11.126 13 It was very easy for manufacturers...to see that...if the slaves [in the West Indies] had wages, the slaves would be clothed...and negro women love fine clothes as well as white women. In every naked negro of those thousands, they saw a future customer.
    EWI 11.129 4 ...an honest tenderness for the poor negro...combined with the national pride, which refused to give the support of English soil or the protection of the English flag to these disgusting violations of nature [slavery in the West Indies].
    EWI 11.140 10 The First of August [1834] marks the entrance of a new element into modern politics, namely, the civilization of the negro.
    EWI 11.140 14 Not the least affecting part of this history of abolition [in the West Indies] is the annihilation of the old indecent nonsense about the nature of the negro.
    EWI 11.141 3 Mr. Clarkson, early in his career, made a collection of African productions and manufactures, as specimens of the arts and culture of the negro;...
    EWI 11.141 22 ...the white has, for ages, done what he could to keep the negro in that hoggish state.
    EWI 11.141 27 The emancipation [in the West Indies] is observed, in the islands, to have wrought for the negro a benefit as sudden as when a thermometer is brought out of the shade into the sun.
    EWI 11.146 8 I doubt not that, sometimes, a despairing negro...has believed there was no vindication of right;...
    EWI 11.146 22 ...some degree of despondency is pardonable, when [the negro] observes the men of conscience and intellect...hotly offended by whatever incidental petulances or infirmities of indiscreet defenders of the negro, as to permit themselves to be ranged with the enemies of the human race;...
    FSLN 11.238 11 The plea in the mouth of a slave-holder that the negro is an inferior race sounds very oddly in my ear.
    FSLN 11.238 17 ...when the Southerner points to the anatomy of the negro, and talks of chimpanzee,-I recall Montesquieu's remark, It will not do to say that negroes are men, lest it should turn out that whites are not.
    ALin 11.332 22 The poor negro said of [Lincoln], on an impressive occasion, Massa Linkum am eberywhere.

Negro, n. (4)

    F 6.16 14 We follow the step of the Jew, of the Indian, of the Negro.
    F 6.16 24 The German and Irish millions, like the Negro, have a great deal of guano in their destiny.
    FSLN 11.227 12 [The Fugitive Slave Law] was the question...whether the Negro shall be...a piece of money?
    Let 12.404 3 Apathies and total want of work...never will obtain any sympathy if there is...an unweeded patch in the garden; not to mention the graver absurdity of a youth of noble aims who can find no field for his energies, whilst the colossal wrongs of the Indian, of the Negro, of the emigrant, remain unmitigated...

negroes, n. (18)

    Chr1 3.94 25 Suppose a slaver on the coast of Guinea should take on board a gang of negroes which should contain persons of the stamp of Toussaint L'Ouverture...
    Mrs1 3.119 23 In the deserts of Borgoo the rock-Tibboos still dwell in caves, like cliff-swallows, and the language of these negroes is compared by their neighbors to the shrieking of bats and to the whistling of birds.
    Res 8.143 21 The emancipation has brought a whole nation of negroes as customers...
    EWI 11.111 24 ...these missionaries [to the West Indies] were persecuted by the planters...and the negroes furiously forbidden to go near them.
    EWI 11.114 12 It was feared that the interest of the master and servant [in the West Indies] would now produce perpetual discord between them. In the island of Antigua, containing 37,000 people, 30,000 being negroes, these objections had such weight that the legislature rejected the apprenticeship system...
    EWI 11.114 18 The negroes [of the West Indies] were called together by the missionaries and by the planters, and the news [of emancipation] explained to them.
    EWI 11.115 2 I have never read anything in history more touching than the moderation of the negroes [at the news of emancipation in the West Indies].
    EWI 11.115 5 Some American captains left the shore and put to sea [at the announcement of emancipation in the West Indies], anticipating insurrection and general murder. With far different thoughts, the negroes spent the hour in their huts and chapels.
    EWI 11.115 21 The first of August [1834] came on Friday, and a release was proclaimed from all work [in the West Indies] until the next Monday. The day was chiefly spent by the great mass of the negroes in the churches and chapels.
    EWI 11.116 15 We were told that the dress of the negroes [in Antigua] on that occasion [of emancipation in the West Indies] was uncommonly simple and modest.
    EWI 11.117 5 In June, 1835, the Ministers, Lord Aberdeen and Sir George Grey, declared to the Parliament...that now for ten months...only one black [in the West Indies] had been hurt in 800,000 negroes...
    EWI 11.117 16 It soon appeared in all the [West Indian] islands that the planters were disposed...to exert the same licentious despotism as before. The negroes complained to the magistrates and to the governor.
    EWI 11.119 26 ...the great island of Jamaica, with a population of half a million, and 300,000 negroes...resolved...to emancipate absolutely on the 1st August, 1838.
    EWI 11.125 11 It was shown to the planters that they, as well as the negroes, were slaves;...
    EWI 11.141 20 It was the sarcasm of Montesquieu, it would not do to suppose that negroes were men, lest it should turn out that whites were not;...
    FSLN 11.238 19 ...when the Southerner points to the anatomy of the negro, and talks of chimpanzee,-I recall Montesquieu's remark, It will not do to say that negroes are men, lest it should turn out that whites are not.
    EPro 11.319 14 It is by no means necessary that this measure [Emancipation] should be suddenly marked by any signal results on the negroes or on the rebel masters.
    SMC 11.355 21 ...the common people [in the South], rich or poor, were...as arrogant as the negroes on the Gambia River;...

Negroes, n. (1)

    Pt1 3.37 26 Our log-rolling...our Negroes and Indians...are yet unsung.

negroes', n. (1)

    EWI 11.119 13 ...[Sir Lionel Smith] defended the Baptist preachers and the stipendiary magistrates, who are the negroes' friends [in Jamaica], from the power of the planter.

negro-fine, adj. (1)

    EdAd 11.384 13 ...[the traveller in America] exclaims, What a negro-fine royalty is that of Jamschid and Solomon.

negro's, n. (2)

    Cour 7.260 8 One heard much cant of peace-parties long ago in Kansas and elsewhere, that their strength lay in the greatness of their wrongs... But were their wrongs greater than the negro's?
    EWI 11.146 13 I doubt not that sometimes the negro's friend, in the face of scornful and brutal hundreds of traders and drivers, has felt his heart sink.

neigh, v. (2)

    Bhr 6.173 8 I have seen men who neigh like a horse when you contradict them...
    Clbs 7.226 9 With some men [conversation] is a debate; at the approach of a dispute they neigh like horses.

neighbor, n. (30)

    Con 1.310 25 ...in this institution of credit...always some neighbor stands ready to be bread and land and tools and stock to the young adventurer.
    SR 2.74 16 Consider whether you have satisfied your relations to... neighbor...
    Comp 2.111 15 ...as soon as there is any departure from simplicity and attempt at halfness, or good for me that is not good for him, my neighbor feels the wrong;...
    Comp 2.112 26 Has [a man] gained by borrowing, through indolence or cunning, his neighbor's wares, or horses, or money? ... The transaction remains in the memory of himself and his neighbor;...
    Exp 3.47 1 ...my neighbor has fertile meadow, but my field, says the querulous farmer, only holds the world together.
    Pol1 3.214 4 Whilst I do what is fit for me, and abstain from what is unfit, my neighbor and I shall often agree in our means...
    Pol1 3.220 27 There is not, among the most religious and instructed men of the most religious and civil nations...a sufficient belief in the unity of things, to persuade them...that the private citizen might be reasonable and a good neighbor, without the hint of a jail or a confiscation.
    NER 3.278 23 ...each man's innocence and his real liking of his neighbor have kept [the proposition of depravity] a dead letter.
    MoS 4.153 22 My neighbor, a jolly farmer, in the tavern bar-room, thinks that the use of money is sure and speedy spending.
    ET5 5.77 22 A man of that [English] brain thinks and acts thus; and his neighbor, being afflicted with the same kind of brain...thinks the same thing...
    Wth 6.123 4 ...the practical neighbor cavils at the position of the barn;...
    Wsp 6.215 20 Every man takes care that his neighbor shall not cheat him.
    Wsp 6.215 22 ...a day comes when [a man] begins to care that he do not cheat his neighbor.
    Cour 7.260 16 An old farmer, my neighbor across the fence, when I ask him if he is not going to town-meeting, says: No, 't is no use balloting, for it will not stay;...
    PerF 10.70 6 See what your robust neighbor, who never feared to live in [the air], has got from it;...
    Edc1 10.133 1 ...the event of each moment...the passing of a beautiful face, the apoplexy of our neighbor, are all tests to try our theory [of life]...
    SovE 10.202 9 ...in trying to dispel the illusions of his neighbor, [a man] opens his own eyes.
    LLNE 10.345 24 [The pilgrim] thought every one should labor at some necessary product, and as soon as he had made more than enough for himself...he should give of the commodity to any applicant, and in turn go to his neighbor for any article which he had to spare.
    LLNE 10.345 26 ...we were curious to know how [the pilgrim] sped in his experiments on the neighbor...
    LLNE 10.361 25 Theodore Parker, the near neighbor of [Brook] farm...was a frequent visitor.
    Thor 10.468 12 [Thoreau]...noticed, with pleasure, that the willow bean-poles of his neighbor had grown more than his beans.
    GSt 10.501 13 ...the painful surprise which the last week brought us, in the tidings of the death of Mr. [George] Stearns, opened all eyes to the just consideration of the singular merits of the citizen, the neighbor, the friend, the father and the husband, whom this assembly mourns.
    War 11.165 20 The standing army, the arsenal, the camp and the gibbet do not appertain to man. They only serve as an index to show where man is now;...what an ugly neighbor he is;...
    FSLN 11.230 24 [Reasonably men] answered...that...each was vying with his neighbor to lead the [Democratic] party...
    FSLN 11.236 23 Whenever a man has come to this mind, that there is...no Constitution but his dealing well and justly with his neighbor;...then certain aids and allies will promptly appear...
    SMC 11.354 23 Every man was an abolitionist by conviction, but did not believe that his neighbor was.
    PLT 12.29 24 ...every man is furnished, if he will heed it, with wisdom necessary to steer his own boat,-if he will not look away from his own to see how his neighbor steers his.
    PLT 12.30 21 When, moved by love, a man...joins with his neighbor in any act of common benefit...it is not done for others, but to fulfil a high necessity of his proper character.
    CInt 12.125 21 What right have you to be better than your neighbor?
    CL 12.148 11 ...a cow does not need so much land as the owner's eyes require between him and his neighbor.

neighborhood, n. (27)

    AmS 1.96 20 Henceforth [the new deed] is an object of beauty, however base its origin and neighborhood.
    MN 1.191 22 ...the bribe acts like the neighborhood of a gold mine to impoverish the farm, the school, the church, the house...
    LT 1.290 11 ...men seem to fear and to shun [the Moral Sentiment] when it comes barely to view in our immediate neighborhood.
    Lov1 2.184 2 Neighborhood, size, numbers, habits, persons, lose by degrees their power over us.
    Fdsp 2.205 9 We chide the citizen because he makes love a commodity. It is...good neighborhood;...
    Prd1 2.238 10 ...the sturdiest offender of your peace and of the neighborhood, if you rip up his claims, is as thin and timid as any...
    Exp 3.53 27 I carry the keys of my castle in my hand, ready to throw them at the feet of my lord, whenever and in what disguise soever he shall appear. I know he is in the neighborhood...
    NR 3.244 5 When [a man] has exhausted for the time the nourishment to be drawn from any one person or thing, that object is withdrawn from his observation, and though still in his immediate neighborhood, he does not suspect its presence.
    GoW 4.265 21 ...let one man have the comprehensive eye that can replace this isolated prodigy in its right neighborhood and bearings...
    ET16 5.278 5 How came the stones [of Stonehenge] here? for these sarsens, or Druidical sandstones, are not found in this neighborhood.
    ET17 5.296 23 A gentleman in the neighborhood told the story of Walter Scott's staying once for a week with Wordsworth...
    F 6.38 22 Life works both voluntarily and supernaturally in its neighborhood.
    Pow 6.66 27 'T is not very rare, the coincidence of sharp private and political practice with public spirit and good neighborhood.
    Wth 6.99 6 If properties of this kind [works of art] were owned by states, towns and lyceums, they would draw the bonds of neighborhood closer.
    Ctr 6.135 18 ...after a man has discovered that there are limits to the interest which his private history has for mankind, he still converses with... perhaps with half a dozen personalities that are famous in his neighborhood.
    Wsp 6.222 9 In a new nation and language, [the countryman's] sect...is lost. ... He misses...the commanding eye of his neighborhood...
    Wsp 6.242 6 Honor and fortune exist to him who always recognizes the neighborhood of the great,--always feels himself in the presence of high causes.
    CbW 6.250 24 I once counted in a little neighborhood and found that every able-bodied man had say from twelve to fifteen persons dependent on him for material aid...
    CbW 6.267 24 ...'t is strange how tenaciously we cling to that bell-astronomy of a protecting domestic horizon. I find the same illusion in the search after happiness which I observe every summer recommenced in this neighborhood...
    CbW 6.274 11 ...see the overpowering importance of neighborhood in all association.
    Cour 7.259 1 ...the protection which a house...neighborhood and property... gives, go in all times to generate this taint of the respectable classes.
    MMEm 10.411 2 When some ladies of my acquaintance by an unusual chance found themselves in her neighborhood and visited her, I told them that [Mary Moody Emerson] was no whistle that every mouth could play on...
    Thor 10.467 20 One of the weapons [Thoreau] used...was a whim which grew on him by indulgence...namely, of extolling his own town and neighborhood as the most favored centre for natural observation.
    SHC 11.433 27 [Sleepy Hollow's] seclusion from the village in its immediate neighborhood had made it to all the inhabitants an easy retreat on a Sabbath day...
    CInt 12.119 15 I value dearly the poet who knows his art so well that, when his voice vibrates, it fills the hearer with sympathetic song, just as a powerful note of an organ sets all tuned strings in its neighborhood in accordant vibration...
    AgMs 12.362 11 ...Mr. D. [Elias Phinney]...would starve in two years on any one of fifty poor farms in this neighborhood...
    Let 12.394 21 By the slightest possible concert, persevered in through four or five years, [the correspondents] think that a neighborhood might be formed of friends who would provoke each other to the best activity.

neighborhoods, n. (4)

    DSA 1.143 1 In the country, neighborhoods, half parishes are signing off, to use the local term.
    Comp 2.127 4 ...the man or woman who would have remained a sunny garden-flower...by the falling of the walls and the neglect of the gardener is made the banian of the forest, yielding shade and fruit to wide neighborhoods of men.
    Pow 6.56 8 ...health...runs over, and inundates the neighborhoods and creeks of other men's necessities.
    FRep 11.534 22 In the planters of this country...the conditions of the country...forced them to a wonderful personal independence and to a certain heroic planting and trading. Later this strength appeared in the solitudes of the West, where...neighborhoods must combine against the Indians...

neighboring, adj. (8)

    Hist 2.40 15 What does Rome know of rat and lizard? What are Olympiads and Consulates to these neighboring systems of being?
    Nat2 3.192 24 This or this [in nature] is but outskirt and a far-off reflection and echo of the triumph that has passed by, and is now at its glancing splendor and heyday, perchance in the neighboring fields...
    MoS 4.164 19 The neighboring lords and gentry brought jewels and papers to [Montaigne] for safe-keeping.
    Aris 10.61 16 ...all comparison with neighboring abilities and reputations, is the road to mediocrity.
    HDC 11.64 1 ...the [Concord] Town Records of that day [April 18, 1689] confine themselves...to conferences with the neighboring towns to run boundary lines.
    HDC 11.68 22 ...it gives life and strength to every attempt to oppose [unconstitutional taxes], that not only the people of this, but the neighboring provinces are remarkably united in the important and interesting opposition...
    HDC 11.78 26 When...the poor of Boston were quartered by the Provincial Congress on the neighboring country, Concord received 82 persons to its hospitality.
    Bost 12.196 7 ...the young farmers and mechanics...in the winter often go into a neighboring town to teach the district school arithmetic and grammar.

neighborly, adj. (3)

    Fdsp 2.210 11 I can get politics and chat and neighborly conveniences from cheaper companions [than my friend].
    NER 3.256 4 The same disposition to scrutiny and dissent appeared in civil, festive, neighborly, and domestic society.
    SS 7.9 22 Such is the tragic necessity which strict science finds underneath our domestic and neighborly life, irresistibly driving each adult soul as with whips into the desert...

neighbors, n. (46)

    LT 1.264 15 ...in the hair-splitting conscientiousness of some eccentric person who has found some new scruple to embarrass himself and his neighbors withal is to be found that which shall constitute the times to come...
    LT 1.273 13 Fain [the wealthy man] would have the name to be religious; fain he would bear up with his neighbors in that.
    Comp 2.124 6 If I feel overshadowed and outdone by great neighbors, I can yet love;...
    SL 2.164 14 It is a pusillanimous desertion of our work to gaze after our neighbors.
    Lov1 2.173 2 Among the throng of girls [the village boy] runs rudely enough, but one alone distances him; and these two little neighbors...have learned to respect each other's personality.
    Prd1 2.238 2 In the occurrence of unpleasant things among neighbors, fear comes readily to heart and magnifies the consequence of the other party;...
    Hsm1 2.263 9 Coarse slander, fire, tar and feathers and the gibbet, the youth may freely bring home to his mind...and inquire how fast he can fix his sense of duty, braving such penalties, whenever it may please the next newspaper and a sufficient number of his neighbors to pronounce his opinions incendiary.
    OS 2.278 20 I feel the same truth how often in my trivial conversation with my neighbors, that somewhat higher in each of us overlooks this by-play...
    Chr1 3.98 11 What have I gained...that I do not tremble before...the Calvinistic Judgment-day,--if I quake...at the threat of...bad neighbors...
    Mrs1 3.119 24 In the deserts of Borgoo the rock-Tibboos still dwell in caves, like cliff-swallows, and the language of these negroes is compared by their neighbors to the shrieking of bats and to the whistling of birds.
    NER 3.275 6 [A man] aims at such things as his neighbors prize...
    MoS 4.157 4 [The skeptic says] Why so talkative in public, when each of my neighbors can pin me to my seat by arguments I cannot refute?
    MoS 4.182 13 Even the doctrines dear to the hope of man...[the spiritualist' s] neighbors can not put the statement so that he shall affirm it.
    ShP 4.205 10 It appears...that [Shakespeare]...was intrusted by his neighbors with their commissions in London...
    ET6 5.105 3 ...not that [the Englishman] is trained to neglect the eyes of his neighbors,--he is really occupied with his own affair and does not think of them.
    ET6 5.106 22 [The English] will not break up, or arrive at any desperate revolution, like their neighbors;...
    ET8 5.127 3 I do not know that [the English] have sadder brows than their neighbors of northern climates.
    ET8 5.127 15 This trait of gloom has been fixed on [the English] by French travellers, who...have spent their wit on the solemnity of their neighbors.
    Wth 6.118 26 The farm yielded no money, and the farmer got on without it. If he fell sick, his neighbors came in to his aid;...
    Ctr 6.155 2 Wordsworth was praised to me in Westmoreland for having afforded to his country neighbors an example of a modest household where comfort and culture were secured without display.
    Wsp 6.203 18 I and my neighbors have been bred in the notion that unless we came soon to some good church...there would be a universal thaw and dissolution.
    Wsp 6.239 25 ...[men] suffer from politics, or bad neighbors...and they would gladly know that they were to be dismissed from the duties of life.
    DL 7.131 25 A collection of this kind [a library and museum]...would dignify the town, and we should love and respect our neighbors more.
    Clbs 7.229 4 We remember the time...on a long journey in the old stage-coach, where...people became...more intimate in a day than if they had been neighbors for years.
    Cour 7.264 4 ...the farmer is skilful to fight [the forest fire]. The neighbors run together; with pine boughs they can mop out the flame...
    Suc 7.306 1 Send a deep man into any town, and he will find another deep man there, unknown hitherto to his neighbors.
    PI 8.67 2 A good poem...goes about the world offering itself to reasonable men, who...carry it to their reasonable neighbors.
    SA 8.86 17 Why need you, who are not a gossip...tell eagerly what the neighbors or the journals say?
    Aris 10.54 3 ...I have seen a man of teeming brain come among these men [in a village]...and drawing all these men round him...interested the whole village...in his facts;...the coldest had found themselves drawn to their neighbors by interest in the same things.
    SovE 10.196 26 I see...that I have been a pitiful person, because I have wished...to dress and order my whole way and system of living. I thought I managed it very well. I see that my neighbors think so.
    Thor 10.458 4 [Thoreau] was more unlike his neighbors in his thought than in his action.
    HDC 11.48 8 A man felt himself at liberty to exhibit, at town-meeting, feelings and actions that he would have been ashamed of anywhere but amongst his neighbors.
    LVB 11.89 13 ...at the instance of a few of my friends and neighbors, I crave of your [Van Buren's] patience a short hearing for their sentiments and my own...
    LVB 11.93 1 In speaking thus the sentiments of my neighbors and my own, perhaps I overstep the bounds of decorum.
    War 11.153 6 The strong tribe...attack and conquer their neighbors...
    War 11.159 18 This valuable person [Assacombuit]...took to killing his own neighbors and kindred...
    FSLC 11.179 20 [Massachusetts laws] never came near me to any discomfort before. I find the like sensibility in my neighbors;...
    FSLN 11.230 3 ...where...[liberty] becomes in a degree matter of concession and protection from their stronger neighbors, the incompatibility and offensiveness of the wrong will of course be most evident to the most cultivated.
    SMC 11.350 7 ...we...believe that our visitors will pardon us if we take the privilege of talking freely about our nearest neighbors as in a family party;...
    SMC 11.375 11 I am sure I need not bespeak your gratitude to these fellow citizens and neighbors of ours [veterans of the Civil War].
    Scot 11.466 4 In his own household and neighbors [Scott] found characters and pets of humble class...
    Scot 11.467 26 [Scott] found himself in his youth and manhood and age in the society of...Wilson, Hogg, De Quincey, to name only some of his literary neighbors...
    Mem 12.105 21 One of my neighbors, a grazier, told me that he should know again every cow, ox, or steer that he ever saw.
    CW 12.171 22 Still less did I know [when I bought my farm] what good and true neighbors I was buying...
    Bost 12.206 10 A house in Boston was worth as much again as a house just as good in a town of timorous people, because here the neighbors would defend each other against bad governors and against troops;...
    Trag 12.413 25 Whilst a man is not grounded in the divine life by his proper roots, he clings by some tendrils of affection to society...but let any shock take place in society...and at once his type of permanence is shaken. The disorder of his neighbors appears to him universal disorder;...

neighbor's, n. [neighbors',] (6)

    Comp 2.112 21 Has [a man] gained by borrowing, through indolence or cunning, his neighbor's wares...
    Comp 2.113 3 [The borrower] may soon come to see that he had better have broken his own bones than to have ridden in his neighbor's coach...
    Mrs1 3.137 24 Not less I dislike a low sympathy of each with his neighbor' s needs.
    DL 7.109 16 A man's money should not follow the direction of his neighbor's money...
    Suc 7.288 24 We are not scrupulous. What we ask is victory, without regard to the cause;...the way of the Talleyrands, prudent people, whose watches go faster than their neighbors'...
    ACri 12.296 14 [Herrick] found his subject where he stood, between his feet...in his village, neighbors' gossip and scandal.

Nelson, Horatio, n. (14)

    Mrs1 3.128 16 The class of power, the working heroes...the Nelson...see that [fashion] is the festivity and permanent celebration of such as they;...
    ET4 5.62 1 It was a tardy recoil of these invasions [of Northmen], when, in 1801, the British government sent Nelson to bombard the Danish forts in the Sound...
    ET4 5.68 1 Nelson, dying at Trafalgar, sends his love to Lord Collingwood...
    ET4 5.68 25 ...[the English] know where their war-dogs lie. Cromwell, Blake, Marlborough, Chatham, Nelson and Wellington are not to be trifled with...
    ET5 5.86 12 Before the bombardment of the Danish forts in the Baltic, Nelson spent day after day, himself, in the boats, on the exhausting service of sounding the channel.
    ET8 5.131 16 ...Nelson said of his sailors, They really mind shot no more than peas.
    ET8 5.141 27 Nelson wrote from [English] hearts his homely telegraph, England expects every man to do his duty.
    ET10 5.153 23 Nelson said, The want of fortune is a crime which I can never get over.
    ET11 5.197 12 Now, said Nelson, when clearing for battle, a peerage, or Westminster Abbey!
    Cour 7.255 17 There is a Hercules...or a Cid in the mythology of every nation; and in authentic history, a Leonidas...a Nelson...
    Suc 7.288 27 I have heard that Nelson used to say, Never mind the justice or the impudence, only let me succeed.
    Grts 8.308 13 ...Nelson, said, I feel that I am fitter to do the action than to describe it.
    Plu 10.318 8 ...wherever the Cid is relished, the legends of...Lord Herbert of Cherbury, Cromwell, Nelson...there will Plutarch...sit as...laureate of the ancient world.
    CInt 12.113 19 You shall not put up in your Academy the statue...of Nelson or Wellington...

Nelson's, Horatio, n. (2)

    ET5 5.86 16 Clerk of Eldin's celebrated manoeuvre of breaking the line of sea-battle, and Nelson's feat of doubling...were only translations into naval tactics of Bonaparte's rule of concentration.
    ET5 5.101 17 The charm in Nelson's history is the unselfish greatness, the assurance of being supported to the uttermost by those whom he supports to the uttermost.

Nemesis, Eternal, n. (1)

    ALin 11.337 16 The ancients believed in a serene and beautiful Genius... which...carried forward the fortunes of certain chosen houses...securing at last the firm prosperity of the favorites of Heaven. It was too narrow a view of the Eternal Nemesis.

Nemesis, n. (8)

    Comp 2.107 16 ...in nature nothing can be given, all things are sold. This is that ancient doctrine of Nemesis...
    SL 2.152 25 A like Nemesis presides over all intellectual works.
    ET14 5.250 6 ...where impatience of the tricks of men makes Nemesis amiable...the inevitable recoil is to heroism...
    Wsp 6.203 17 A self-poise belongs to every particle, and a rectitude to every mind, and is the Nemesis and protector of every society.
    Aris 10.39 17 I wish...men who are charmed by the beautiful Nemesis as well as by the dire Nemesis...
    Aris 10.39 18 I wish...men who are charmed by the beautiful Nemesis as well as by the dire Nemesis...
    FSLC 11.200 11 ...the Nemesis works underneath again.
    Shak1 11.451 16 The unaffected joy of the comedy...contrasted with the grandeur of the tragedy...where [Shakespeare's] speech is a Delphi,-the great Nemesis that he is and utters.

neologists, n. (1)

    ET12 5.212 26 ...I should as soon think of quarrelling with the janitor for not magnifying his office by hostile sallies into the street...as of quarrelling with the professors for not admiring the young neologists who pluck the beards of Euclid and Aristotle...

Nepal [Nepaul], n. (2)

    Mrs1 3.144 14 ...here is...Tul Wil Shan, the exiled nabob of Nepaul, whose saddle is the new moon.
    ET15 5.267 12 What would The [London] Times say? is a terror in Paris, in Berlin, in Vienna, in Copenhagen and in Nepaul.

nepenthe, n. (1)

    UGM 4.23 25 Nature never spares the opium or nepenthe...

Nepenthe, n. (1)

    CW 12.174 21 Plant...Dittany, Asphodel, Nepenthe...

nephew, n. (6)

    MoS 4.152 22 Spence relates that Mr. Pope was with Sir Godfrey Kneller one day, when his nephew, a Guinea trader, came in.
    MoS 4.152 23 Spence relates that Mr. Pope was with Sir Godfrey Kneller one day, when his nephew, a Guinea trader, came in. Nephew, said Sir Godfrey, you have the honor of seeing the two greatest men in the world.
    MMEm 10.404 6 [Mary Moody Emerson] writes to her nephew Charles Emerson, in 1833: I could never have adorned a garden.
    MMEm 10.407 27 [Mary Moody Emerson's] nephew [C. C. Emerson] wrote of her: I am glad the friendship with Aunt Mary is ripening.
    MMEm 10.422 20 To her nephew Charles [Mary Moody Emerson writes]: War; what do I think of it? Why in your ear I think it so much better than oppression that if it were ravaging the whole geography of despotism it would be an omen of high and glorious import.
    MAng1 12.242 12 ...a nobler sentiment, uttered by [Michelangelo], is contained in his reply to a letter of Vasari, who had informed him of the rejoicings made at the house of his nephew Lionardo, at Florence, over the birth of another Buonarotti.

Neptune, n. (5)

    Pt1 3.6 23 ...the Universe has three children...which reappear under different names in every system of thought, whether they be called cause, operation and effect; or, more poetically, Jove, Pluto, Neptune;...
    Chr1 3.98 6 What have I gained, that I no longer immolate a bull to Jove or to Neptune...
    Wsp 6.205 17 Laomedon, in his anger at Neptune and Apollo...does not hesitate to menace them...
    Dem1 10.14 9 The poor ship-master discovered a sound theology, when in the storm at sea he made his prayer to Neptune, O God, thou mayst save me if thou wilt, and if thou wilt thou mayst destroy me; but, however, I will hold my rudder true.
    Chr2 10.105 3 We use in our idlest poetry and discourse the words Jove, Neptune, Mercury, as mere colors...

Neri, Philip, St., n. (5)

    Wsp 6.227 20 There was a wise, devout man who is called in the Catholic Church, St. Philip Neri...
    Wsp 6.228 2 Among the nuns in a convent not far from Rome, one had appeared who laid claim to certain rare gifts of inspiration and prophecy, and the abbess advised the Holy Father of the wonderful powers shown by her novice. The Pope did not well know what to make of these new claims, and Philip coming in from a journey one day, he consulted him.
    Wsp 6.228 3 Philip undertook to visit the nun and ascertain her character.
    Wsp 6.228 11 ...Philip [Neri] stretched out his leg, all bespattered with mud, and desired [the nun] to draw off his boots.
    Wsp 6.228 16 Philip [Neri] ran out of doors, mounted his mule and returned instantly to the Pope;...

Nero, Court of, n. (1)

    Plu 10.312 1 Seneca...by his conversation with the Court of Nero...learned to temper his philosophy with facts.

Nero, n. (3)

    Cour 7.276 5 ...there are melancholy skeptics with a taste for carrion who batten on the hideous facts in history...devilish lives, Nero, Caesar Borgia...
    Plu 10.312 9 ...we owe to that wonderful moralist [Seneca] illustrious maxims; as if the scarlet vices of the times of Nero had the natural effect of driving virtue to its loftiest antagonisms.
    CL 12.147 15 When Nero advertised for a new luxury, a walk in the woods should have been offered.

Nero's, n. (1)

    ET1 5.16 12 ...[Carlyle] liked Nero's death...

nerve, n. (5)

    ET4 5.67 5 On the English face are combined decision and nerve with the fair complexion, blue eyes and open and florid aspect.
    ET14 5.246 6 ...in Hallam, or in the firmer intellectual nerve of Mackintosh, one still finds the same type of English genius.
    Suc 7.283 4 We are feeling our youth and nerve and bone.
    SA 8.95 17 ...there are trials enough of nerve and character...in privatest circles.
    MMEm 10.418 9 O the power of vision, then the delicate power of the nerve which receives impressions from sounds!

nerve, v. (3)

    Comp 2.125 27 We linger in the ruins of the old tent...nor believe that the spirit can feed, cover, and nerve us again.
    ET14 5.235 12 A good [English] writer, if he has indulged in a Roman roundness, makes haste to chasten and nerve his period by English monosyllables.
    Suc 7.309 13 Nerve us with incessant affirmatives.

nerveless, adj. (1)

    Ctr 6.136 24 ...our talents are as mischievous as if each had been seized upon by some bird of prey...some zeal, some bias, and only when he was now gray and nerveless was it relaxing its claws...

nerves, n. (11)

    AmS 1.95 20 I do not see how any man can afford, for the sake of his nerves and his nap, to spare any action in which he can partake.
    MoS 4.153 21 The nerves, says Cabanis, they are the man.
    MoS 4.176 2 ...a book...or only the sound of a name, shoots a spark through the nerves, and we suddenly believe in will...
    ET11 5.172 5 The inequality of power and property [in England] shocks republican nerves.
    Ctr 6.165 27 Half engaged in the soil, pawing to get free, man needs all the music that can be brought to disengage him. If Love, red Love, with tears and joy;...if Science with her telegraphs through the deeps of space and time can set his dull nerves throbbing...make way and sing paean!
    Suc 7.299 12 Does that deep-toned bell, which has shortened many a night of ill nerves, render to you nothing but acoustic vibrations?
    SA 8.88 14 If...a man has not firm nerves...it is perhaps a wise economy to go to a good shop and dress himself irreproachably.
    SovE 10.187 15 The civil history of men might be traced by the successive meliorations as marked in higher moral generalizations;...at last came the day when...the nerves of the world were electrified by the proclamation that all men are born free and equal.
    MMEm 10.429 18 [God] communicates this our condition and humble waiting, or I [Mary Moody Emerson] should never perceive Him. Science, Nature,-O, I 've yearned to open some page;-not now, too late. Ill health and nerves.
    II 12.80 11 It was the saying of Pythagoras, Remember to be sober, and to be disposed to believe; for these are the nerves of wisdom.
    Milt1 12.256 19 The muscles, the nerves and the flesh with which this skeleton is to be filled out and covered exist in [Milton's] works and must be sought there.

nervie, adj. (1)

    Pt1 3.31 8 ...George Chapman, following [Timaeus], writes, So in our tree of man, whose nervie root/ Springs in his top;/...

nervous, adj. (16)

    YA 1.370 1 ...the nervous, rocky West is intruding a new and continental element into the national mind...
    NR 3.230 10 In the parliament, in the play-house, at dinner-tables [in England], I might see a great number of rich, ignorant, book-read, conventional, proud men,--many old women,--and not anywhere the Englishman who...did the bold and nervous deeds.
    MoS 4.166 12 [Montaigne]...is so nervous, by factitious life, that he thinks the more barbarous man is, the better he is.
    ShP 4.200 15 The nervous language of the Common Law, the impressive forms of our courts...are the contribution of all the sharp-sighted, strong-minded men who have lived in the countries where these laws govern.
    ET5 5.78 5 The people [of England] have that nervous bilious temperament which is known by medical men to resist every means employed to make its possessor subservient to the will of others.
    F 6.16 11 We like the nervous and victorious habit of our own branch of the family.
    Wsp 6.203 5 Men as naturally make a state, or a church, as caterpillars a web. If they were more refined...it would be nervous...
    WD 7.169 3 Cannot memory still descry the old school-house and its porch...and do you not recall that life...threw itself into nervous knots of glittering hours...
    WD 7.171 7 ...the treasures which Nature spent itself to amass...and the answering brain and nervous structure replying to these;...are given immeasurably to all.
    Elo2 8.123 19 [John Quincy Adams's] last lecture...contained some nervous allusions to the treatment he had received from his old friends...
    MoL 10.250 6 [Nature says to the American] I give you...the forest and the mine, the elemental forces, nervous energy.
    Plu 10.304 3 Many examples might be cited [in Plutarch] of nervous expression and happy allusion...
    MMEm 10.433 2 Is it the less desirable to have the lofty abstractions because the abstractionist is nervous and irritable?
    ACiv 11.300 23 [People] bring their opinion [of slavery] into the world. If they have a comatose tendency in the brain, they are pro-slavery while they live; if of a nervous sanguineous temperament, they are abolitionists.
    Scot 11.467 2 [Scott's] strong good sense saved him...from nervous egotism...
    WSL 12.337 4 We sometimes meet in a stage-coach in New England an erect, muscular man...whose nervous speech instantly betrays the English traveller;...

nervous, n. (1)

    PLT 12.24 6 ...the nervous and hysterical and animalized will produce a like series of symptoms in you...

nervousness, n. (1)

    EWI 11.144 14 ...now, the arrival in the world of such men as Toussaint... outweighs in good omen all the English and American humanity. The anti-slavery of the whole world is dust in the balance before this,-is a poor squeamishness and nervousness...

nest, n. (14)

    Nat 1.59 10 I do not wish to...soil my gentle nest.
    LT 1.263 2 ...[persons] have the skill to make the world look bleak and inhospitable, or seem the nest of tenderness and joy.
    OS 2.265 5 ...Yonder masterful cuckoo/ Crowds every egg out of the nest,/ Quick or dead, except its own;/...
    Pt1 3.30 13 Men have really...found within their world another world, or nest of worlds;...
    SwM 4.131 12 ...a bird does not more readily weave its nest...than this seer of the souls [Swedenborg] substructs a new hell and pit...round every new crew of offenders.
    WD 7.182 4 Shakspeare made his Hamlet as a bird weaves its nest.
    PI 8.36 22 What are [the poet's] garland and singing-robes? What but a sensibility so keen that the scent of an elder-blow, or the timber-yard and corporation-works of a nest of pismires is event enough for him...
    PPo 8.255 10 My phoenix long ago secured/ His nest in the sky-vault's cope;/ In the body's cage immured,/ He was weary of life's hope./
    PPo 8.256 10 O high-flying falcon! the Tree of Life is thy perch;/ This nook of grief fits thee ill for a nest./
    PPo 8.260 13 ...what a nest has [Hafiz] found for his bonny bird to take up her abode in!
    Imtl 8.333 1 The skeptic affirms that the universe is a nest of boxes with nothing in the last box.
    MMEm 10.431 12 [Mary Moody Emerson] checks herself amid her passionate prayers for immediate communion with God;...I cowering in the nest of quiet for so many years;...
    Thor 10.469 27 [Thoreau] wore a straw hat, stout shoes, strong gray trousers...to climb a tree for a hawk's or a squirrel's nest.
    HCom 11.343 16 Here...in this little nest of New England republics [enthusiasm] flamed out when the guilty gun was aimed at Sumter.

nestle, v. (3)

    Nat2 3.171 25 We nestle in nature...
    ShP 4.211 27 A good reader can, in a sort, nestle into Plato's brain and think from thence; but not into Shakspeare's.
    War 11.175 7 ...if the rising generation can be provoked to think it unworthy to nestle into every abomination of the past...then war has a short day...

nestler, n. (1)

    DL 7.103 6 The size of the nestler is comic...

nestles, v. (2)

    PPo 8.255 16 Round and round this heap of ashes/ Now flies the bird [the phoenix] amain,/ But in that odorous niche of heaven/ Nestles the bird again./
    FSLN 11.234 19 These things show that no forms...are of any use in themselves. The Devil nestles comfortably into them all.

nestling, v. (1)

    GoW 4.273 23 Amid littleness and detail, [Goethe] detected the Genius of life...nestling close beside us...

nests, n. (3)

    ET12 5.213 13 ...when you have settled it that the universities are moribund, out comes a poetic influence from the heart of Oxford, to mould the opinions of cities, to build their houses as simply as birds their nests...
    Thor 10.466 20 ...the fishes [in the Concord River], and their spawning and nests, their manners, their food;...were all known to [Thoreau]...
    Thor 10.466 25 ...the conical heaps of small stones on the river-shallows, the huge nests of small fishes...were all known to [Thoreau]...

net, adj. (5)

    Int 2.340 4 When we are young we spend much time and pains in filling our note-books...in the hope that in the course of a few years we shall have condensed into our encyclopaedia the net value of all the theories at which the world has yet arrived.
    Exp 3.47 18 The history of literature--take the net result of Tiraboschi, Warton, or Schlegel--is a sum of very few ideas...
    NER 3.281 16 I believe it is the conviction of the purest men that the net amount of man and man does not much vary.
    Wth 6.110 25 The cost of education of the posterity of this great colony [of immigrants], I will not compute. But the gross amount of these costs will begin to pay back what we thought was a net gain from our transatlantic customers of 1800.
    Grts 8.308 22 Set ten men to write their journal for one day, and nine of them will leave out their thought, or proper result,-that is, their net experience...

net, n. (2)

    SL 2.164 24 I can think of nothing to fill my time with, and I find the Life of Brant. It is a very extravagant compliment to pay to Brant...or to General Washington. My time should be as good as their time...my net of relations, as good as theirs...
    PPo 8.256 13 O high-flying falcon! the Tree of Life is thy perch;/ This nook of grief fits thee ill for a nest./ Hearken! they call to thee down from the ramparts of heaven;/ I cannot divine what holds thee here in a net./

Netherlands, n. (1)

    ET8 5.137 16 ...[the English] administer, in different parts of the world, the codes of every empire and race;...at the Cape of Good Hope, of the old Netherlands;...

nets, n. (1)

    HDC 11.36 14 Of the Indian hemp [the Indians] spun their nets and lines for summer angling...

netted, v. (1)

    Wth 6.94 2 ...how did North America get netted with iron rails, except by the importunity of these orators who dragged all the prudent men in?

nettle, n. (2)

    Fdsp 2.208 23 Better be a nettle in the side of your friend than his echo.
    Trag 12.410 2 [People with an appetite for grief] handle every nettle and ivy in the hedge...

nettles, n. (3)

    AmS 1.101 17 ...[the scholar] takes...the frequent uncertainty and loss of time, which are the nettles...in the way of the self-relying...
    ET16 5.277 16 Within the enclosure [of Stonehenge] grow buttercups, nettles...
    CW 12.172 7 Still less did I know [when I bought my farm] what good and true neighbors I was buying...some of them now known the country through...and...other men not known widely but known at home, farmers... when witch-grass and nettles grew, causing a forest of apple-trees or miles of corn and rye to thrive.

Nettsheim, Agrippa von, Hen (2)

    Boks 7.190 2 ...there are books which are of that importance in a man's private experience as to verify for him the fables of Cornelius Agrippa...
    Boks 7.211 14 Cornelius Agrippa On the Vanity of Arts and Sciences is a specimen of that scribatiousness which grew to be the habit of the gluttonous readers of his time.

network, n. (6)

    Con 1.308 16 I find this vast network, which you call property, extended over the whole planet.
    ET5 5.97 4 The nearer we look, the more artificial is [the Englishmen's] social system. Their law is a network of fictions.
    ET15 5.263 22 [The London Times] has shown those qualities which are dear to Englishmen...a towering assurance, backed by...its world-wide network of correspondence and reports.
    CbW 6.256 25 What is the benefit done by a good King Alfred...compared with the involuntary blessing wrought on nations by the selfish capitalists who built the...network of the Mississippi Valley roads;...
    AKan 11.263 5 ...now, vast property...webs of party, cover the land with a network that immensely multiplies the dangers of war.
    MLit 12.331 24 Poetry is with Goethe thus external...but the Muse never assays those thunder-tones...which dissipate by dreadful melody all this iron network of circumstance...

neurologists, n. (2)

    NR 3.234 25 Anomalous facts, as...the new allegations of phrenologists and neurologists, are of ideal use.
    NER 3.285 12 It is so wonderful to our neurologists that a man can see without his eyes, that it does not occur to them that it is just as wonderful that he should see with them;...

neuters, n. (2)

    CbW 6.252 1 The mass are animal, in pupilage, and near chimpanzee. But the units whereof this mass is composed, are neuters, every one of which may be grown to a queen-bee.
    Prch 10.231 7 There are always plenty of young, ignorant people...wanting peremptorily instruction; but in the usual averages of parishes, only one person that is qualified to give it. ... The others...are only neuters in the hive...

neutral, adj. (2)

    Comp 2.91 14 The lonely Earth amid the balls/ That hurry through the eternal halls,/ A makeweight flying to the void,/ Supplemental asteroid,/ Or compensatory spark,/ Shoots across the neutral Dark./
    Boks 7.189 5 ...certainly there is dilettanteism enough, and books that are merely neutral and do nothing for us.

neutrality, n. (2)

    SR 2.49 15 Ah, that [a man] could pass again into his neutrality!
    Aris 10.63 16 Let [the man of honor] accept the position of armed neutrality...

neutralize, v. (4)

    Tran 1.345 7 ...this masterpiece is the result of such an extreme delicacy that the most unobserved flaw in the boy will neutralize the most aspiring genius, and spoil the work.
    Wth 6.112 10 [Each man] wants an equipment of means and tools proper to his talent. And to save on this point were to neutralize the special strength and helpfulness of each mind.
    Elo1 7.97 19 [The eloquent man] is not to neutralize [the people's] opposition...
    Suc 7.291 23 ...[every man] is to dare...not help others as they would direct him, but as he knows his helpful power to be. To do otherwise is to neutralize all those extraordinary special talents distributed among men.

neutralized, v. (2)

    EPro 11.317 26 When we consider the immense opposition that has been neutralized or converted by the progress of the war...one can hardly say the deliberation [on the Emancipation Proclamation] was too long.
    EPro 11.322 12 If [taxes] go to fill up this yawning Dismal Swamp, which...neutralized hitherto all the vast capabilities of this continent,-then this taxation...is the best investment in which property-holder ever lodged his earnings.

neutralizes, v. (4)

    LT 1.266 4 ...there will be fragments and hints of men, more than enough: bloated promises, which end in nothing or little. And then truly great men, but with some defect in their composition which neutralizes their whole force.
    Exp 3.51 21 Very mortifying is the reluctant experience that some unfriendly excess or imbecility neutralizes the promise of genius.
    SwM 4.97 22 Must the highest good drag after it a quality which neutralizes and discredits it?
    Prch 10.235 3 Great sweetness of temper neutralizes such vast amounts of acid!

neutrals, n. (1)

    LT 1.269 26 The fury with which the slave-trader defends every inch of... his howling auction-platform, is a trumpet...to...drive all neutrals to take sides...

Nevada, n. (1)

    EPro 11.314 11 O North! give [the slave] beauty for rags,/ And honor, O South! for his shame;/ Nevada! coin thy golden crags/ With freedom's image and name./

never, adv. (1029)

    Nat 1.8 1 Nature never wears a mean appearance.
    Nat 1.8 4 Nature never became a toy to a wise spirit.
    Nat 1.16 25 We are never tired, so long as we can see far enough.
    Nat 1.18 15 ...in the same field, [the attentive eye] beholds, every hour, a picture which was never seen before...
    Nat 1.18 16 ...in the same field, [the attentive eye] beholds, every hour, a picture which...shall never be seen again.
    Nat 1.21 12 When Sir Harry Vane was dragged up the Tower-hill, sitting on a sled...one of the multitude cried out to him, You never sate on so glorious a seat!
    Nat 1.29 2 ...the moment a ray of relation is seen to extend from [the ant] to man...then all its habits, even that said to be recently observed, that it never sleeps, become sublime.
    Nat 1.29 18 ...this conversion of an outward phenomenon into a type of somewhat in human life, never loses its power to affect us.
    Nat 1.37 7 What tedious training...never ending, to form the common sense;...
    Nat 1.40 8 Man is never weary of working [nature] up.
    Nat 1.41 11 ...[discipline] is [nature's] public and universal function, and is never omitted.
    Nat 1.48 14 God never jests with us...
    Nat 1.49 18 [To the senses] Things are ultimates, and they never look beyond their sphere.
    Nat 1.56 13 Turgot said, He that has never doubted the existence of matter, may be assured he has no aptitude for metaphysical inquiries.
    Nat 1.57 12 ...life is no longer irksome, and we think it will never be so.
    AmS 1.83 18 The state of society is one in which the members...strut about so many walking monsters, - a good finger, a neck, a stomach, an elbow, but never a man.
    AmS 1.85 5 There is never a beginning, there is never an end, to the inexplicable continuity of this web of God...
    AmS 1.85 6 There is never a beginning, there is never an end, to the inexplicable continuity of this web of God...
    AmS 1.85 10 Therein [nature] resembles [the scholar's] own spirit, whose beginning, whose ending, he never can find...
    AmS 1.90 1 I had better never see a book than to be warped by its attraction clean out of my own orbit...
    AmS 1.92 15 ...[insects] lay up food before death for the young grub they shall never see.
    AmS 1.93 14 The discerning will read, in his Plato or Shakspeare...only the authentic utterances of the oracle; - all the rest he rejects, were it never so many times Plato's and Shakspeare's.
    AmS 1.94 1 Gowns and pecuniary foundations...can never countervail the least sentence or syllable of wit.
    AmS 1.94 22 Without [action] thought can never ripen into truth.
    AmS 1.102 13 ...it becomes [the scholar]...to defer never to the popular cry.
    AmS 1.108 13 The man has never lived that can feed us ever.
    AmS 1.112 21 There is one man of genius...whose literary value has never yet been rightly estimated; - I mean Emanuel Swedenborg.
    DSA 1.119 14 The mystery of nature was never displayed more happily.
    DSA 1.120 13 What am I? and What is? asks the human spirit with a curiosity...never to be quenched.
    DSA 1.123 7 Thefts never enrich;...
    DSA 1.123 7 ...alms never impoverish;...
    DSA 1.125 25 ...[man] can never go behind this sentiment [of virtue].
    DSA 1.125 26 In the sublimest flights of the soul, rectitude is never surmounted...
    DSA 1.125 27 In the sublimest flights of the soul...love is never outgrown.
    DSA 1.126 3 The principle of veneration never dies out.
    DSA 1.126 5 Man fallen...into sensuality, is never quite without the visions of the moral sentiment.
    DSA 1.126 26 ...the oracles of this truth cease never...
    DSA 1.135 20 ...the need was never greater of new revelation than now.
    LE 1.158 10 The resources of the scholar are co-extensive with nature and truth, yet can never be his unless claimed by him with an equal greatness of mind.
    LE 1.164 13 ...concede [the man of letters] talents never so rare, denying him genius, and he is aggrieved.
    LE 1.169 17 ...this beauty...which the sun and the moon, the snow and the rain, repaint and vary, has never been recorded by art...
    LE 1.171 17 Shut the shutters never so quick to keep all the light in, it is all in vain;...
    LE 1.172 8 ...a wise man will never esteem [the book of philosophy] anything final and transcending.
    LE 1.180 4 ...[Napoleon] neglected never the least particular of preparation...
    LE 1.182 2 Let [the scholar]...serve the world as a true and noble man; never forgetting to worship the immortal divinities who whisper to the poet...
    MN 1.193 9 Men...are continually yielding to this dazzling result of numbers, that which they would never yield to the solitary example of any one.
    MN 1.195 13 There is no man; there hath never been.
    MN 1.196 1 As our soils and rocks lie in strata...so do all men's thinkings run laterally, never vertically.
    MN 1.197 7 We can never be quite strangers or inferiors in nature.
    MN 1.199 9 We can never surprise nature in a corner;...
    MN 1.199 10 We can...never find the end of a thread; never tell where to set the first stone.
    MN 1.214 16 ...a man never sees the same object twice...
    MN 1.216 6 Your end should be one inapprehensible to the senses; then will it be a god always approached, never touched;...
    MN 1.217 3 Never self-possessed or prudent, [Love] is all abandonment.
    MN 1.218 14 All your learning of all literatures would never enable you to anticipate one of its thoughts or expressions...
    MN 1.222 7 ...the solicitations of this spirit, as long as there is life, are never forborne.
    MR 1.228 15 ...the doctrine of Reform had never such scope as at the present hour.
    MR 1.230 6 ...the scholar says, Cities and coaches shall never impose on me again;...
    MR 1.236 15 The use of manual labor is one which never grows obsolete...
    MR 1.246 22 ...[infirm people] never bestir themselves to serve another person;...
    MR 1.254 18 Love...will accomplish that by imperceptible methods...which force could never achieve.
    LT 1.278 19 I must get with truth, though I should never come to act, as you call it, with effect.
    LT 1.281 18 ...Pestalozzi...recorded his conviction that the amelioration of outward circumstances will be the effect but can never be the means of mental and moral improvement.
    LT 1.282 27 Can there be too much intellect? We have never met with any such excess.
    LT 1.283 21 The thinker...never invites me to be present with him at his invocation of truth...
    LT 1.284 10 I think men never loved life less.
    LT 1.284 19 ...before the young American is put into jacket and trowsers, he says, I want something which I never saw before...
    LT 1.286 3 There was never so great a thought laboring in the breasts of men as now.
    Con 1.299 6 Conservatism never puts the foot forward;...
    Con 1.304 15 The Indian and barbarous name can never be supplanted without loss.
    Con 1.308 2 I never dreamed about methods;...
    Con 1.320 6 [Conservatism's] religion is just as bad;...always mitigations, never remedies;...
    Con 1.320 7 [Conservatism's] religion is just as bad;...never self-help, renovation, and virtue.
    Con 1.324 1 It will never make any difference to a hero what the laws are.
    Tran 1.330 19 Every materialist will be an idealist; but an idealist can never go backward to be a materialist.
    Tran 1.331 8 Even the materialist Condillac...was constrained to say...we never go out of ourselves;...
    Tran 1.336 5 ...the spiritual measure of inspiration is the depth of the thought, and never, who said it?
    Tran 1.344 26 So many promising youths, and never a finished man!
    Tran 1.346 11 [A man] ought to be...a great influence, which should never let his brother go...
    Tran 1.346 13 [A man] ought to be...a great influence...so that though absent he should never be out of my mind...
    Tran 1.346 14 [A man] ought to be...a great influence...so that though absent he should never be out of my mind, his name never far from my lips;...
    Tran 1.347 15 [Transcendentalists] feel that they are never so fit for friendship as when they have quitted mankind...
    Tran 1.348 10 The philanthropists...had as lief hear that their friend is dead, as that he is a Transcendentalist; for then is he paralyzed, and can never do anything for humanity.
    Tran 1.349 7 Each cause as it is called...say Calvinism, or Unitarianism- becomes speedily a little shop, where the article, let it have been at first never so subtle and ethereal, is now made up into portable and convenient cakes...
    Tran 1.352 20 ...[the Transcendentalist says, my faith] is a certain brief experience, which...made me aware...that to me belonged trust, a child's trust, and obedience, and the worship of ideas, and I should never be fool more.
    Tran 1.353 23 ...the two lives, of the understanding and of the soul, which we lead...never meet and measure each other...
    Tran 1.356 18 ...these old guardians never change their minds;...
    YA 1.368 16 ...the culture of years will never make the most painstaking apprentice [the man of genius's] equal...
    YA 1.371 22 ...there is a sublime and friendly Destiny by which the human race is guided,-the race never dying, the individual never spared...
    YA 1.375 26 Difference of opinion is the one crime which kings never forgive.
    YA 1.385 7 ...many people...are never happier than when difficult practical questions...are to be solved.
    YA 1.390 9 That is [the hero's] nobility...always to throw himself...on the liberal, on the expansive side, never on the defensive, the conserving, the timorous, the lock-and-bolt system.
    Hist 2.7 16 A true aspirant therefore never needs look for allusions personal and laudatory in discourse.
    Hist 2.8 4 The student is...to esteem his own life the text [of history], and books the commentary. Thus compelled, the Muse of history will utter oracles, as never to those who do not respect themselves.
    Hist 2.13 20 Nature is a mutable cloud which is always and never the same.
    Hist 2.14 1 Nothing is so fleeting as form; yet never does it quite deny itself.
    Hist 2.15 4 ...we have [the Greek national mind expressed] once again in sculpture...a multitude of forms in the utmost freedom of action and never transgressing the ideal serenity;...
    Hist 2.15 7 ...we have [the Greek national mind expressed] once again in sculpture...a multitude of forms...like votaries performing some religious dance before the gods, and, though in convulsive pain or mortal combat, never daring to break the figure and decorum of their dance.
    Hist 2.21 16 ...the Persian court in its magnificent era never gave over the nomadism of its barbarous tribes...
    SR 2.49 6 [The boy] cumbers himself never about consequences...
    SR 2.51 15 ...never varnish your hard, uncharitable ambition with this incredible tenderness for black folk a thousand miles off.
    SR 2.57 6 It seems to be a rule of wisdom never to rely on your memory alone...
    SR 2.60 13 Let us never bow and apologize more.
    SR 2.83 6 ...never imitate.
    SR 2.83 19 Shakspeare will never be made by the study of Shakspeare.
    SR 2.84 12 Society never advances.
    Comp 2.122 13 The soul...always affirms an Optimism, never a Pessimism.
    Comp 2.123 15 ...the harm that I sustain I carry about with me, and never am a real sufferer but by my own fault.
    SL 2.131 16 If in the hours of clear reason we should speak the severest truth, we should say that we had never made a sacrifice.
    SL 2.132 13 Our young people are diseased with the theological problems of original sin, origin of evil, predestination and the like. These never presented a practical difficulty to any man...
    SL 2.132 14 Our young people are diseased with the theological problems of original sin, origin of evil, predestination and the like. These...never darkened across any man's road who did not go out of his way to seek them.
    SL 2.133 1 My will never gave the images in my mind the rank they now take.
    SL 2.142 18 ...whatever in his apprehension is worth doing, that let [a man] communicate, or men will never know and honor him aright.
    SL 2.147 3 A chemist may tell his most precious secrets to a carpenter, and he shall be never the wiser...
    SL 2.148 11 My children, said an old man to his boys scared by a figure in the dark entry, my children, you will never see anything worse than yourselves.
    SL 2.149 8 Take the book into your two hands and read your eyes out, you will never find what I find.
    SL 2.154 19 There are not in the world at any time more than a dozen persons who read and understand Plato,--never enough to pay for an edition of his works;...
    SL 2.156 20 Faces never lie, it is said.
    SL 2.157 1 I have heard an experienced counsellor say that he never feared the effect upon a jury of a lawyer who does not believe in his heart that his client ought to have a verdict.
    SL 2.157 11 That which we do not believe we cannot adequately say, though we may repeat the words never so often.
    SL 2.158 14 ...there need never be any doubt concerning the respective ability of human beings.
    SL 2.158 17 Pretension never feigned an act of real greatness.
    SL 2.158 18 Pretension never wrote an Iliad...
    SL 2.158 26 Never was a sincere word utterly lost.
    SL 2.158 26 Never a magnanimity fell to the ground, but there is some heart to greet and accept it unexpectedly.
    SL 2.159 16 If you would not be known to do any thing, never do it.
    Lov1 2.172 12 Perhaps we never saw [the lovers] before and never shall meet them again. But we see them exchange a glance...and we are no longer strangers.
    Lov1 2.178 23 ...the maiden stands to [the lover] for a representative of all select things and virtues. For that reason the lover never sees personal resemblances in his mistress to her kindred or to others.
    Lov1 2.181 2 ...we feel that what we love is not in your will, but above it. It is not you, but your radiance. It is that which you know not in yourself and can never know.
    Fdsp 2.198 15 ...Dear Friend, If I was...sure to match my mood with thine, I should never think again of trifles in relation to thy comings and goings.
    Fdsp 2.198 22 ...thou art to me a delicious torment. Thine ever, or never.
    Fdsp 2.202 19 [Before a friend] I am arrived at last in the presence of a man so real and equal that I may drop even those undermost garments of dissimulation, courtesy, and second thought, which men never put off...
    Fdsp 2.206 8 [Friendship] should never fall into something usual and settled...
    Fdsp 2.206 22 [Friendship] cannot subsist in its perfection...betwixt more than two. I am not quite so strict in my terms, perhaps because I have never known so high a fellowship as others.
    Fdsp 2.207 10 In good company there is never such discourse between two, across the table, as takes place when you leave them alone.
    Fdsp 2.208 1 Unrelated men...will never suspect the latent powers of each.
    Fdsp 2.211 20 There can never be deep peace between two spirits...until in their dialogue each stands for the whole world.
    Fdsp 2.211 21 There can never be deep peace between two spirits, never mutual respect, until in their dialogue each stands for the whole world.
    Fdsp 2.212 12 You shall not come nearer a man by getting into his house. If unlike...you shall never catch a true glance of his eye.
    Fdsp 2.216 11 It never troubles the sun that some of his rays fall wide and vain into ungrateful space...
    Prd1 2.223 15 The world is filled with the proverbs and acts and winkings of a base prudence...a prudence...which never subscribes, which never gives, which seldom lends...
    Prd1 2.226 23 We are instructed by these petty experiences which usurp the hours and years. ... Such is the value of these matters that a man who knows other things can never know too much of these.
    Prd1 2.227 8 The domestic man...has solaces which others never dream of.
    Prd1 2.232 5 [The man of talent's] art never taught him lewdness...
    Prd1 2.234 21 The eye of prudence may never shut.
    Prd1 2.238 22 If you meet a sectary or a hostile partisan, never recognize the dividing lines...
    Prd1 2.239 20 The natural motions of the soul are so much better than the voluntary ones that you will never do yourself justice in dispute.
    Prd1 2.240 1 Wisdom will never let us stand with any man or men on an unfriendly footing.
    Hsm1 2.246 11 ...Never one object underneath the sun/ Will I behold before my Sophocles:/ Farewell;.../
    Hsm1 2.250 25 Heroism feels and never reasons, and therefore is always right;...
    Hsm1 2.253 24 ...the master has amply provided for the reception of the men and their animals, and is never happier than when they tarry for some time.
    Hsm1 2.258 17 We have seen or heard of many extraordinary young men who never ripened...
    Hsm1 2.259 27 ...O friend, never strike sail to a fear!
    Hsm1 2.260 23 A simple manly character need never make an apology...
    Hsm1 2.261 5 Has nature covenanted with me that I should never appear to disadvantage...
    Hsm1 2.261 6 Has nature covenanted with me that I should...never make a ridiculous figure?
    Hsm1 2.262 4 ...the day never shines in which this element [heroism] may not work.
    OS 2.267 19 Why do men feel that the natural history of man has never been written...
    OS 2.282 24 The soul answers never by words...
    OS 2.283 19 Never a moment did that sublime spirit [Jesus] speak in [men' s] patois.
    OS 2.283 24 Jesus, living in these moral sentiments [truth, justice, love]... never made the separation of the idea of duration from the essence of these attributes...
    OS 2.286 14 Thoughts come into our minds by avenues which we never left open...
    OS 2.286 15 ...thoughts go out of our minds through avenues which we never voluntarily opened.
    OS 2.295 5 He that finds God a sweet enveloping thought to him never counts his company.
    OS 2.295 19 ...[the soul] never appeals from itself.
    Cir 2.301 21 This fact [that around every circle another can be drawn], as far as it symbolizes the moral fact of the Unattainable...around which the hands of man can never meet...may conveniently serve us to connect many illustrations of human power in every department.
    Cir 2.306 14 The last chamber, the last closet, [every man] must feel was never opened;...
    Cir 2.308 9 Infinitely alluring and attractive was [a man] to you yesterday... a sea to swim in; now, you have found his shores, found it a pond, and you care not if you never see it again.
    Cir 2.308 17 ...we can never go so far back as to preclude a still higher vision.
    Cir 2.313 6 We can never see Christianity from the catechism...
    Cir 2.313 14 ...yet was there never a young philosopher whose breeding had fallen into the Christian church by whom that brave text of Paul's was not specially prized...
    Cir 2.313 20 Let the claims and virtues of persons be never so great and welcome, the instinct of man presses eagerly onward to the impersonal and illimitable...
    Cir 2.315 8 Geoffrey draws on his boots to go through the woods, that his feet may be safer from the bite of snakes; Aaron never thinks of such a peril.
    Cir 2.318 18 ...this incessant movement and progression which all things partake could never become sensible to us but by contrast to some principle of fixture or stability in the soul.
    Cir 2.322 4 A man, said Oliver Cromwell, never rises so high as when he knows not whither he is going.
    Int 2.330 10 A true man never acquires after college rules.
    Int 2.331 1 This instinctive action never ceases in a healthy mind...
    Int 2.337 8 A child knows...if the attitude [in a picture] be natural or grand or mean; though he has never received any instruction in drawing...
    Int 2.340 8 ...at last we discover that our curve is a parabola, whose arcs will never meet.
    Int 2.341 26 God offers to every mind its choice between truth and repose. Take which you please,--you can never have both.
    Art1 2.351 1 Because the soul is progressive, it never quite repeats itself...
    Art1 2.353 5 Though he were never so original...[a man] cannot wipe out from his work every trace of the thoughts amidst which it grew.
    Art1 2.353 5 Though he were...never so wilful and fantastic, [a man] cannot wipe out from his work every trace of the thoughts amidst which it grew.
    Art1 2.365 7 ...true art is never fixed...
    Art1 2.367 2 ...the hand can never execute any thing higher than the character can inspire.
    Pt1 3.4 10 ...the highest minds of the world have never ceased to explore the double meaning...of every sensuous fact;...
    Pt1 3.11 25 Man, never so often deceived, still watches for the arrival of a brother who can hold him steady to a truth until he has made it his own.
    Pt1 3.12 27 ...the all-piercing, all-feeding and ocular air of heaven that man shall never inhabit.
    Pt1 3.19 12 ...in a centred mind, it signifies nothing how many mechanical inventions you exhibit. Though you add millions, and never so surprising, the fact of mechanics has not gained a grain's weight.
    Pt1 3.19 21 A shrewd country-boy goes to the city for the first time, and the complacent citizen is not satisfied with his little wonder. It is not that he does not see all the fine houses and know that he never saw such before...
    Pt1 3.28 20 ...never can any advantage be taken of nature by a trick.
    Exp 3.43 19 The lords of life, the lords of life,--/ I saw them pass,/ In their own guise,/ .../ Dearest Nature, strong and kind,/ Whispered, Darling, never mind!/ To-morrow they will wear another face,/ The founder thou! these are thy race!/
    Exp 3.46 16 We never got [wisdom, poetry, virtue] on any dated calendar day.
    Exp 3.48 16 [Grief], like all the rest...never introduces me into the reality...
    Exp 3.48 19 Was it Boscovich who found out that bodies never come in contact?
    Exp 3.48 20 ...souls never touch their objects.
    Exp 3.49 27 Direct strokes [nature] never gave us power to make;...
    Exp 3.51 24 We see young men who owe us a new world...but they never acquit the debt;...
    Exp 3.52 6 In truth [men] are all creatures of given temperament, which will appear in a given character, whose boundaries they will never pass;...
    Exp 3.53 22 I had fancied that the value of life lay...in the fact that I never know, in addressing myself to a new individual, what may befall me.
    Exp 3.54 23 Into every intelligence there is a door which is never closed, through which the creator passes.
    Exp 3.56 3 How strongly I have felt of pictures that when you have seen one well, you must take your leave of it; you shall never see it again.
    Exp 3.56 26 Our friends early appear to us as representatives of certain ideas which they never pass or exceed.
    Exp 3.57 1 [Our friends] stand on the brink of the ocean of thought and power, but they never take the single step that would bring them there.
    Exp 3.63 6 ...the Transfiguration...the Communion of Saint Jerome, and what are as transcendent as these, are on the walls of the Vatican, the Uffizi, or the Louvre, where every footman may see them; to say nothing of...the sculpture of the human body never absent.
    Exp 3.63 12 I think I will never read any but the commonest books...
    Exp 3.68 12 ...the mind...never prospers but by fits.
    Exp 3.68 22 ...the moral sentiment is well called the newness, for it is never other;...
    Exp 3.69 20 The years teach much which the days never know.
    Exp 3.75 3 I exert the same quality of power in all places. Thus journeys the mighty Ideal before us; it never was known to fall into the rear.
    Exp 3.77 16 Never can love make consciousness and ascription equal in force.
    Exp 3.78 12 ...men never speak of crime as lightly as they think;...
    Exp 3.79 27 ...use what language we will, we can never say anything but what we are;...
    Exp 3.85 8 ...I have not found that much was gained by manipular attempts to realize the world of thought. Many eager persons successively make an experiment in this way, and make themselves ridiculous. ... Worse, I observe that in the history of mankind there is never a solitary example of success,--taking their own tests of success.
    Exp 3.85 13 ...there never was a right endeavor but it succeeded.
    Exp 3.85 27 ...in the solitude to which every man is always returning, he has a sanity and revelations which in his passage into new worlds he will carry with him. Never mind the ridicule, never mind the defeat; up again, old heart!--it seems to say...
    Chr1 3.95 5 Is there never a glimpse of right in a poor slave-captain's mind;...
    Chr1 3.97 13 [The feeble souls] never behold a principle until it is lodged in a person.
    Chr1 3.101 23 I knew an amiable and accomplished person who undertook a practical reform, yet I was never able to find in him the enterprise of love he took in hand.
    Chr1 3.106 1 Two persons lately...have given me occasion for thought. When I explored the source of their sanctity and charm for the imagination, it seemed as if each answered, From my non-conformity; I never listened to your people's law...
    Chr1 3.106 4 ...I never listened to your people's law...and wasted my time. I was content with the simple rural poverty of my own; hence this sweetness; my work never reminds you of that, is pure of that.
    Chr1 3.108 7 Nature never rhymes her children...
    Chr1 3.113 20 ...we have never seen a man...
    Chr1 3.114 1 We shall one day see...that...grandeur of character acts in the dark, and succors them who never saw it.
    Mrs1 3.123 13 ...personal force never goes out of fashion.
    Mrs1 3.125 23 If the aristocrat is only valid in fashionable circles and not with truckmen, he will never be a leader in fashion;...
    Mrs1 3.127 24 Napoleon...never ceased to court the Faubourg St. Germain;...
    Mrs1 3.134 5 A gentleman never dodges;...
    Mrs1 3.145 24 The epitaph of Sir Jenkin Grout is not wholly unintelligible to the present age: Here lies Sir Jenkin Grout...he never forgot his children;...
    Mrs1 3.149 13 I have seen an individual whose manners, though wholly within the conventions of elegant society, were never learned there...
    Mrs1 3.151 4 ...are there not women...who anoint our eyes and we see? We say things we never thought to have said;...
    Mrs1 3.154 17 Osman had a humanity so broad and deep that although his speech was so bold and free with the Koran as to disgust all the dervishes, yet was there never a poor outcast...but fled at once to him;...
    Gts 3.163 27 It is a very onerous business, this of being served, and the debtor naturally wishes to give you a slap. A golden text for these gentlemen is that which I so admire in the Buddhist, who never thanks, and who says, Do not flatter your benefactors.
    Nat2 3.171 6 We come to our own [in the woods], and make friends with matter, which the ambitious chatter of the schools would persuade us to despise. We never can part with it;...
    Nat2 3.176 2 The moral sensibility which makes Edens and Tempes so easily, may not be always found, but the material landscape is never far off.
    Nat2 3.178 9 If there were good men, there would never be this rapture in nature.
    Nat2 3.187 16 Great causes are never tried on their merits;...
    Nat2 3.193 8 It is the same among the men and women as among the silent trees;...never a presence and satisfaction.
    Nat2 3.193 10 Is it that beauty can never be grasped?...
    Nat2 3.194 27 ...the drag is never taken from the wheel.
    Nat2 3.196 8 The divine circulations never rest nor linger.
    Pol1 3.201 5 Meantime the education of the general mind never stops.
    Pol1 3.205 11 Cover up a pound of earth never so cunningly...it will always weigh a pound;...
    Pol1 3.211 23 Fisher Ames expressed the popular security more wisely... saying that...a republic is a raft, which would never sink, but then your feet are always in water.
    Pol1 3.212 23 There is a middle measure which satisfies all parties, be they never so many or so resolute for their own.
    Pol1 3.215 9 ...if, without carrying [my child] into the thought, I look over into his plot, and, guessing how it is with him, ordain this or that, he will never obey me.
    Pol1 3.217 9 Malthus and Ricardo quite omit [character];...the President's Message, the Queen's Speech, have not mentioned it; and yet it is never nothing.
    Pol1 3.219 15 [The movement toward self-government] was never adopted by any party in history, neither can be.
    Pol1 3.219 23 The power of love, as the basis of a State, has never been tried.
    Pol1 3.221 2 ...there never was in any man sufficient faith in the power of rectitude to inspire him with the broad design of renovating the State on the principle of right and love.
    NR 3.226 17 Great men or men of great gifts you shall easily find, but symmetrical men never.
    NR 3.234 15 Beautiful details we must have, or no artist; but they must be means and never other.
    NR 3.234 23 Anomalous facts, as the never quite obsolete rumors of magic and demonology...are of ideal use.
    NR 3.237 18 [Nature] would never get anything done, if she suffered Admirable Crichtons and universal geniuses.
    NR 3.241 19 ...gamesters say that the cards beat all the players, though they were never so skilful...
    NR 3.247 10 ...the Truth sits veiled there on the Bench, and never interposes an adamantine syllable;...
    NR 3.247 22 ...if there could be any regulation...that a man should never leave his point of view without sound of trumpet.
    NER 3.258 25 ...the Good Spirit never cared for the colleges...
    NER 3.259 13 ...the persons who, at forty years, still read Greek, can all be counted on your hand. I never met with ten.
    NER 3.259 22 If the physician, the lawyer, the divine, never use [Greek and Latin] to come at their ends, I need never learn it to come at mine.
    NER 3.259 23 If the physician, the lawyer, the divine, never use [Greek and Latin] to come at their ends, I need never learn it to come at mine.
    NER 3.262 25 If I should go out of church whenever I hear a false sentiment I could never stay there five minutes.
    NER 3.266 7 ...the force which moves the world is a new quality, and can never be furnished by adding whatever quantities of a different kind.
    NER 3.269 26 A canine appetite for knowledge was generated, which must still be fed but was never satisfied...
    NER 3.269 27 A canine appetite for knowledge was generated...and this knowledge...never took the character of substantial, humane growth...
    NER 3.271 21 [Genius's] own idea it never executed.
    NER 3.281 26 ...man stands in strict connection with a higher fact never yet manifested.
    NER 3.282 14 ...although I have never expressed the truth, and although I have never heard the expression of it from any other, I know that the whole truth is here for me.
    NER 3.282 15 ...although I have never expressed the truth, and although I have never heard the expression of it from any other, I know that the whole truth is here for me.
    UGM 4.6 22 He is great...who never reminds us of others.
    UGM 4.13 27 [Mental and moral force] goes out from you, whether you will or not, and profits me whom you never thought of.
    UGM 4.14 24 What is he whom I never think of?
    UGM 4.15 5 What has friendship so signal as its sublime attraction to whatever virtue is in us? We will never more think cheaply of ourselves...
    UGM 4.17 21 ...we are entitled to these enlargements [of the imagination], and once having passed the bounds shall never again be quite the miserable pedants we were.
    UGM 4.18 4 The eyes of Plato, Shakspeare, Swedenborg, Goethe, never shut on either of these laws [of identity and of reaction].
    UGM 4.23 25 Nature never spares the opium or nepenthe...
    UGM 4.24 8 The worthless and offensive members of society...never get over their astonishment at the ingratitude and selfishness of their contemporaries.
    UGM 4.27 12 ...[Voltaire] said of the good Jesus, even, I pray you, let me never hear that man's name again.
    UGM 4.28 12 There is somewhat deceptive about the intercourse of minds. The boundaries are invisible, but they are never crossed.
    UGM 4.29 21 Serve the great. ... Never mind the taunt of Boswellism...
    UGM 4.31 17 ...if any appear never to assume the chair, but always to stand and serve, it is because we do not see the company in a sufficiently long period for the whole rotation of parts to come about.
    UGM 4.32 14 Nature never sends a great man into the planet without confiding the secret to another soul.
    UGM 4.34 23 We have never come at the true and best benefit of any genius so long as we believe him an original force.
    PPh 4.39 10 There was never such range of speculation [as in Plato].
    PPh 4.41 17 ...these [great] men magnetize their contemporaries, so that their companions can do for them what they can never do for themselves;...
    PPh 4.46 11 The same weakness and want, on a higher plane, occurs daily in the education of ardent young men and women. ah! you don't undertand me; I have never met with any one who comprehends me...
    PPh 4.48 27 ...each [Unity and Variety] so fast slides into the other that we can never say what is one, and what it is not.
    PPh 4.58 15 ...[Plato] believes...that the gods never philosophize...
    PPh 4.58 23 ...[Plato's] circumspection never forsook him.
    PPh 4.59 19 ...Plato, in his plenty, is never restricted, but has the fit word.
    PPh 4.61 16 [Plato] omits never this graduation, but slopes his thought, however picturesque the precipice on one side, to an access from the plain.
    PPh 4.61 18 [Plato] never writes in ecstasy...
    PPh 4.63 11 The soul which has never perceived the truth, cannot pass into the human form [said Plato].
    PPh 4.70 10 This faith in the Divinity is never out of mind, and constitutes the ground of all [Plato's] dogmas.
    PPh 4.71 23 [Socrates]...never willingly went beyond the walls...
    PPh 4.76 4 ...expounding...the hope of the parting soul,--[Plato] is literary, and never otherwise.
    PPh 4.76 27 Here is the world...perfect, not the smallest piece of chaos left, never a stitch nor an end...
    PPh 4.78 4 The acutest German, the lovingest disciple, could never tell what Platonism was;...
    PNR 4.81 25 The naturalist would never help us to [the expansions of facts] by any discoveries of the extent of the universe...
    PNR 4.83 23 Plato affirms the coincidence of science and virtue; for vice can never know itself and virtue, but virtue knows both itself and vice.
    PNR 4.89 1 ...poetry has never soared higher than in the Timaeus and the Phaedrus.
    SwM 4.101 2 [Swedenborg] was never married.
    SwM 4.112 7 [Swedenborg] saw nature wreathing through an everlasting spiral, with wheels that never dry, on axles that never creak...
    SwM 4.117 12 Swedenborg first put the fact [of Correspondence] into a detached and scientific statement, because it was habitually present to him, and never not seen.
    SwM 4.118 11 Why hear I the same sense from countless differing voices, and read one never quite expressed fact in endless picture-language?
    SwM 4.122 17 Instead of a religion which visited [Swedenborg] diplomatically three or four times,--when he was born, when he married, when he fell sick and when he died, and, for the rest, never interfered with him,--here was a teaching which accompanied him all day...
    SwM 4.123 21 What earnestness and weightiness [in Swedenborg],--his eye never roving...
    SwM 4.126 21 [According to Swedenborg] It is never permitted to any one, in heaven, to stand behind another and look at the back of his head;...
    SwM 4.134 17 Though the agency of the Lord is in every line referred to by name [by Swedenborg], it never becomes alive.
    SwM 4.138 21 ...the divine effort is never relaxed;...
    SwM 4.143 14 ...[Swedenborg] could never break the umbilical cord which held him to nature...
    SwM 4.145 11 ...with a tenacity that never swerved in all his studies, inventions, dreams, [Swedenborg] adheres to this brave choice [of goodness].
    MoS 4.149 9 Nothing so thin but has these two faces [sensation and morals], and when the observer has seen the obverse, he turns it over to see the reverse. Life is a pitching of this penny,--heads or tails. We never tire of this game...
    MoS 4.151 22 On the other part, the men of toil and trade and luxury,--the animal world...and the practical world, including the painful drudgeries which are never excused to philosopher or poet any more than to the rest,-- weigh heavily on the other side.
    MoS 4.168 4 There have been men with deeper insight [than Montaigne's]; but, one would say, never a man with such abundance of thoughts...
    MoS 4.168 6 ...[Montaigne] is never dull, never insincere...
    MoS 4.168 25 Montaigne...never shrieks, or protests, or prays...
    MoS 4.173 17 [Doubts and negations] will never be so formidable when once they have been identified and registered.
    MoS 4.179 4 A method in the world we do not see, but this parallelism of great and little, which never react on each other...
    MoS 4.183 5 The final solution in which skepticism is lost, is in the moral sentiment, which never forfeits its supremacy.
    ShP 4.193 1 Here [in the Elizabethan drama] is...the Death of Julius Caesar, and other stories out of Plutarch, which [the audience] never tire of;...
    ShP 4.199 18 Is there at last in [the writer's] breast a Delphi whereof to ask concerning any thought or thing, whether it be verily so, yea or nay? and to have answer, and to rely on that? All the debts which such a man could contract to other wit would never disturb his consciousness of originality;...
    ShP 4.200 3 There never was a time when there was not some translation [of the Bible] existing.
    ShP 4.200 22 The translation of Plutarch gets its excellence by being translation on translation. There never was a time when there was none.
    ShP 4.202 25 Bacon...never mentioned [Shakespeare's] name.
    ShP 4.203 24 Since the constellation of great men who appeared in Greece in the time of Pericles, there was never any such society [as that in Elizabethan England];...
    ShP 4.212 15 ...[Shakespeare's] talents never seduced him into an ostentation...
    ShP 4.214 7 Daguerre learned how to let one flower etch its image on his plate of iodine, and then proceeds at leisure to etch a million. There are always objects; but there was never representation.
    ShP 4.217 8 [Shakespeare]...never took the step which seemed inevitable to such genius, namely to explore the virtue which resides in these [natural] symbols and imparts this power:--what is that which they themselves say?
    NMW 4.229 1 [Napoleon] is never weak and literary...
    NMW 4.232 3 [Bonaparte] had a directness of action never before combined with so much comprehension.
    NMW 4.232 10 [Bonaparte] never blundered into victory...
    NMW 4.233 22 ...[Napoleon] never for a moment lost sight of his way onward...
    NMW 4.236 2 [Bonaparte] never economized his ammunition...
    NMW 4.236 23 [Napoleon] fought sixty battles. He had never enough.
    NMW 4.237 9 [Napoleon's] very attack was never the inspiration of courage...
    NMW 4.241 5 ...a sort of freedom and companionship grew up between [Napoleon] and [his troops], which the forms of his court never permitted between the officers and himself.
    NMW 4.248 13 If [the land-commander] allows himself to be guided by the commissaries [Napoleon remarks] he will never stir...
    NMW 4.255 3 I do not even love my brothers [said Napoleon]: perhaps Joseph a little...and Duroc, I love him too; but why?--because his character pleases me...I believe the fellow never shed a tear.
    NMW 4.257 5 Never was such a leader so endowed and so weaponed [as Napoleon];...
    NMW 4.257 6 Never was such a leader so endowed and so weaponed [as Napoleon]; never leader found such aids and followers.
    NMW 4.257 22 ...when men saw...after the destruction of armies, new conscriptions; and they who had toiled so desperately were never nearer to the reward...they deserted [Napoleon].
    GoW 4.264 18 Nature has dearly at heart the formation of the speculative man, or scholar. It is an end never lost sight of...
    GoW 4.271 2 There was never such a miscellany of facts.
    GoW 4.276 15 Goethe would have no word that does not cover a thing. The same measure will still serve [with the Devil]: I have never heard of any crime which I might not have committed.
    GoW 4.278 8 I suppose no book of this century can compare with [Goethe' s Wilhelm Meister] in its delicious sweetness...so provoking to the mind, gratifying it with...so many unexpected glimpses into a higher sphere, and never a trace of rhetoric or dulness.
    GoW 4.281 8 ...[the German intellect] has a certain probity, which never rests in a superficial performance...
    GoW 4.284 8 Goethe can never be dear to men.
    ET1 5.6 6 ...[Greenough] thought art would never prosper until we left our shy jealous ways and worked in society as [the Greeks].
    ET1 5.9 6 ...[Landor] professed never to have heard of Herschel...
    ET1 5.9 14 ...Mr. H[are], one of the guests, told me that Mr. Landor gives away his books, and has never more than a dozen at a time in his house.
    ET1 5.20 14 I [Wordsworth] am told that things are boasted of in the second class of society there [in America], which, in England,--God knows, are done in England every day, but would never be spoken of.
    ET1 5.20 27 [Wordsworth] said he talked on political aspects, for he wished to impress on me and all good Americans...never to call into action the physical strength of the people...
    ET1 5.21 20 [Wordsworth] had never gone farther than the first part [of Goethe's Wilhelm Meister];...
    ET1 5.22 6 ...[Wordsworth] never writes prose...
    ET1 5.23 10 [Wordsworth] replied he never was in haste to publish;...
    ET2 5.27 9 The shortest sea-line from Boston to Liverpool is 2850 miles. This a steamer keeps, and saves 150 miles. A sailing ship can never go in a shorter line than 3000...
    ET2 5.27 13 Our good master...by incessant straight steering, never loses a rod of way.
    ET2 5.27 17 Since the ship was built, it seems, the master never slept but in his day-clothes whilst on board.
    ET2 5.32 26 When their privilege was disputed by the Dutch and other junior marines, on the plea that you could never anchor on the same wave... the English did not stick to claim the channel, or the bottom of all the main...
    ET3 5.37 25 The innumerable details [in England]...all these catching the eye and never allowing it to pause, hide all boundaries by the impression of magnificence and endless wealth.
    ET4 5.53 9 As you go north into the manufacturing and agricultural districts, and to the population that never travels;...the world's Englishman is no longer found.
    ET4 5.55 25 The English come mainly from the Germans...a people about whom in the old empire the rumor ran there was never any that meddled with them that repented it not.
    ET4 5.59 9 Never was a poor gentleman so surfeited with life...as the Northman.
    ET4 5.68 18 ...Sir Edward Parry said of Sir John Franklin, that if he found Wellington Sound open, he explored it; for he was a man who never turned his back on a danger...
    ET4 5.69 25 The extremes of poverty and ascetic penance, it would seem, never reach cold water in England.
    ET4 5.72 18 Two centuries ago the English horse never performed any eminent service beyond the seas;...
    ET5 5.80 25 All the steps [the English] orderly take; but with the high logic of never confounding the minor and major proposition;...
    ET5 5.87 11 ...[the English] fundamentally believe that the best strategem in naval war is to lay your ship close alongside of the enemy's ship and bring all your guns to bear on him, until you or he go to the bottom. This is the old fashion, which never goes out of fashion...
    ET5 5.87 14 It is not usually a point of honor...and never any whim, that [the English] will shed their blood for;...
    ET5 5.93 22 [The English] are a family to which a destiny attaches, and the Banshee has sworn that a male heir shall never be wanting.
    ET6 5.103 8 ...the machines [in England] require punctual service, and as they never tire, they prove too much for their tenders.
    ET6 5.105 18 In a company of strangers you would think [the Englishman] deaf; his eyes never wander from his table and newspaper.
    ET6 5.105 19 [The Englishman] is never betrayed into any curiosity or unbecoming emotion.
    ET6 5.105 22 [Englishmen] have all been trained in one severe school of manners, and never put off the harness.
    ET6 5.110 24 As soon as [the English] have rid themselves of some grievance and settled the better practice, they...never wish to hear of alteration more.
    ET6 5.112 17 When Thalberg the pianist was one evening performing before the Queen at Windsor, in a private party, the Queen accompanied him with her voice. The circumstance took air, and all England shuddered from sea to sea. The indecorum was never repeated.
    ET7 5.116 20 Private men [in England] keep their promises, never so trivial.
    ET7 5.122 3 See [the Irish], [the English] said, one hundred and twenty-seven all voting like sheep, never proposing any thing...
    ET7 5.123 7 When Castlereagh dissuaded Lord Wellington from going to the king's levee until the unpopular Cintra business had been explained, he replied, You furnish me a reason for going. I will go to this, or I will never go to a king's levee.
    ET7 5.123 10 The radical mob at Oxford cried after the tory Lord Eldon, There's old Eldon; cheer him; he never ratted.
    ET7 5.125 1 ...when the Rochester rappings began to be heard of in England, a man deposited 100 pounds in a sealed box in the Dublin Bank, and then advertised in the newspapers to all somnambulists, mesmerizers and others, that whoever could tell him the number of his note should have the money. He let it lie there six months...and he said, Now let me never be bothered more with this proven lie.
    ET7 5.125 8 It is told of a good Sir John that he heard a case stated by counsel, and made up his mind; then the counsel for the other side taking their turn to speak, he found himself so unsettled and perplexed that he exclaimed, So help me God! I will never listen to evidence again.
    ET7 5.125 25 ...tortures, it is said, could never wrest from an Egyptian the confession of a secret.
    ET7 5.126 8 Defoe, who knew his countrymen well, says of them,--In close intrigue, their faculty's but weak,/ For generally whate'er they know, they speak,/ And often their own counsels undermine/ By mere infirmity without design;/ From whence, the learned say, it doth proceed,/ That English treasons never can succeed;/...
    ET8 5.128 19 ...I suppose never nation built their party-walls so thick, or their garden-fences so high [as the English].
    ET8 5.135 13 Here [in England] was lately a cross-grained miser [Joseph Turner]...who never gave a dinner to any man...
    ET8 5.137 23 ...the English press [is] never timorous about French opinion...
    ET8 5.140 5 King Harold gave [Haldor] this testimony, that he, among all his men, cared least about doubtful circumstances...for whatever turned up, he was never in higher nor in lower spirits...
    ET8 5.140 6 King Harold gave [Haldor] this testimony, that he, among all his men, cared least about doubtful circumstances...for whatever turned up, he...never slept less nor more on account of them...
    ET9 5.152 22 Amerigo Vespucci...whose highest naval rank was boatswain' s mate in an expedition that never sailed, managed in this lying world to supplant Columbus...
    ET10 5.153 24 Nelson said, The want of fortune is a crime which I can never get over.
    ET10 5.156 24 Lord Burleigh writes to his son that one ought never to devote more than two thirds of his income to the ordinary expenses of life...
    ET10 5.160 6 ...when, to this labor and trade and these native resources [of England] was added this goblin of steam...never tired...the amassing of property has run out of all figures.
    ET10 5.163 8 ...all that can succor the talent or arm the hands of the intelligent middle class, who never spare in what they buy for their own consupmtion;...is in open market [in England].
    ET10 5.164 13 ...the provisions to lock and transmit [English property] have exercised the cunningest heads in a profession which never admits a fool.
    ET11 5.172 9 Many of the [English] halls...are beautiful desolations. The proprietor never saw them, or never lived in them.
    ET11 5.177 7 The pretence is that the [English] noble is of unbroken descent from the Norman, and has never worked for eight hundred years.
    ET11 5.186 7 ...if [English nobility] never hear plain truth from men, they see the best of everything...
    ET11 5.186 18 ...it is wonderful how much talent runs into manners:-- nowhere and never so much as in England.
    ET11 5.194 5 Campbell says, Acquaintance with the nobility, I could never keep up.
    ET11 5.197 2 The fiction with which the noble and the bystander equally please themselves [in England] is that the former is of unbroken descent from the Norman, and so has never worked for eight hundred years.
    ET12 5.200 19 ...out of twelve hundred young men [at Oxford]...a duel has never occurred.
    ET12 5.206 15 As the number of undergraduates at Oxford is only about 1200 or 1300, and many of these are never competitors, the chance of a fellowship is very great.
    ET13 5.221 16 ...gentlemen lately testified in the House of Commons that in their lives they never saw a poor man in a ragged coat inside a church.
    ET14 5.232 6 [The English]...never are surprised into a covert or witty word...
    ET14 5.232 19 [The English] ask their constitutional utility in verse. The kail and herrings are never out of sight.
    ET14 5.240 10 [Bacon] held this element [prima philosophia] essential: it is never out of mind...
    ET14 5.240 10 [Bacon] held this element [prima philosophia] essential...he never spares rebukes for such as neglect it;...
    ET14 5.248 7 It is very certain...that if Lord Bacon had been only the sensualist his critic pretends, he would never have acquired the fame which now entitles him to this patronage.
    ET14 5.258 22 For a self-conceited modish life...there is no remedy like the Oriental largeness. That astonishes and disconcerts English decorum. For once, there is thunder it never heard...
    ET14 5.258 23 For a self-conceited modish life...there is no remedy like the Oriental largeness. That astonishes and disconcerts English decorum. For once, there is...light it never saw...
    ET15 5.263 17 I asked one of [the London Times's] old contributors whether it had once been abler than it is now? Never, he said;...
    ET15 5.266 16 ...[the London Times] has never wanted the first pens for occasional assistance.
    ET15 5.268 6 The [London] Times never disapproves of what itself has said...
    ET15 5.269 23 Was never such arrogancy as the tone of this paper [the London Times].
    ET15 5.272 9 The [London] Times...wishes never to be in a minority.
    ET16 5.287 12 ...I opened the dogma of no-government and non-resistance... and procured a kind of hearing for it. I said, it is true that I have never seen in any country a man of sufficient valor to stand for this truth...
    ET17 5.291 22 At the landing in Liverpool, I found my Manchester correspondent awaiting me, a gentleman whose kind reception was followed by a train of friendly and effective attentions which never rested whilst I remained in the country.
    ET17 5.295 24 I said, if Plato's Republic were published in England as a new book to-day, do you think it would find any readers?--[Wordsworth] confessed it would not: and yet, he added after a pause, with that complacency which never deserts a true-born Englishman, and yet we have embodied it all.
    ET17 5.297 8 Landor, always generous, says that [Wordsworth] never praised anybody.
    ET18 5.302 15 We cannot go deep enough into the biography of the spirit who never throws himself entire into one hero...
    ET18 5.303 12 In the island [England], they never let out all the length of all the reins...
    F 6.15 15 [Nature] turns the gigantic pages...never re-turning one.
    F 6.23 15 ...nothing is more disgusting than...the flippant mistaking for freedom of some paper preamble...by those who have never dared to think or to act...
    Pow 6.75 14 During the whole period of his administration [Pericles] never dined at the table of a friend.
    Pow 6.80 24 ...never was any signal act or achievement in history but by this expenditure [of spirit].
    Wth 6.91 22 The world is full of fops who never did anything...
    Wth 6.95 24 ...I have never seen a rich man.
    Wth 6.95 24 I have never seen a man as rich as all men ought to be...
    Wth 6.112 24 ...society can never prosper but must always be bankrupt, until every man does that which he was created to do.
    Wth 6.117 4 The secret of success lies never in the amount of money...
    Wth 6.117 8 ...after expense has been fixed at a certain point, then new and steady rills of income, though never so small, being added, wealth begins.
    Wth 6.117 21 Want is a growing giant whom the coat of Have was never large enough to cover.
    Wth 6.119 12 A master in each art is required, because the practice is never with still or dead subjects...
    Wth 6.121 5 I know...neither how to buy wood, nor what to do with...the wood-lot, when bought. Never fear; it is all settled how it shall be, long beforehand, in the custom of the country...
    Wth 6.123 3 ...the baker doubts he shall never like to drive up to the door;...
    Ctr 6.134 19 ...the student we speak to must have a mother-wit...which uses all books, arts, facilities, and elegancies of intercourse, but is never subdued and lost in them.
    Ctr 6.139 25 ...Marshal Lannes said to a French officer, Know, Colonel, that none but a poltroon will boast that he never was afraid.
    Ctr 6.140 10 There are people who can never understand a trope...
    Ctr 6.144 18 I knew a leading man in a leading city, who, having set his heart on an education at the university and missed it, could never quite feel himself the equal of his own brothers who had gone thither.
    Ctr 6.144 21 I knew a leading man in a leading city, who, having set his heart on an education at the university and missed it, could never quite feel himself the equal of his own brothers who had gone thither. His easy superiority to multitudes of professional men could never quite countervail to him this imaginary defect.
    Ctr 6.145 17 Can we never extract this tape-worm of Europe from the brain of our countrymen?
    Ctr 6.146 17 The boy grown up on a farm, which he has never left, is said in the country to have had no chance...
    Ctr 6.151 6 How the imagination is piqued by anecdotes...of Epaminondas, who never says anything, but will listen eternally;...
    Ctr 6.155 11 There is a great deal of self-denial and manliness in poor and middle-class houses in town and country, that has not got into literature, and never will...
    Ctr 6.156 7 In the morning,--solitude; said Pythagoras; that nature may speak to the imagination, as she does never in company...
    Ctr 6.160 23 The orator who has once seen things in their divine order will never quite lose sight of this...
    Ctr 6.163 25 ...every brave heart must treat society as a child, and never allow it to dictate.
    Bhr 6.175 14 ...Nature and Destiny...never fail to leave their mark...
    Bhr 6.186 10 Society...if you do not belong to it, resists and sneers at you, or quietly drops you. The first weapon enrages the party attacked; the second...is not to be resisted, as the date of the transaction is not easily found. People grow up and grow old under this infliction, and never suspect the truth...
    Bhr 6.193 1 It is sublime to feel and say of another, I need never meet or speak or write to him;...
    Wsp 6.208 24 In creeds never was such levity;...
    Wsp 6.213 25 ...we are never without a hint that these powers [of the senses and of the understanding] are mediate and servile...
    Wsp 6.219 8 ...if in sidereal ages gravity and projection keep their craft, and the ball never loses its way in its wild path through space,--a secreter gravitation, a secreter projection rule not less tyrannically in human history...
    Wsp 6.226 12 There was never a man born so wise or good but one or more companions came into the world with him, who delight in his faculty and report it.
    Wsp 6.226 26 ...you can never say anything but what you are.
    Wsp 6.227 4 [Another] has heard from me what I never spoke.
    Wsp 6.234 20 [Benedict] said, I am never beaten until I know that I am beaten.
    Wsp 6.235 8 ...[Benedict said] in all the encounters that have yet chanced, I have not been weaponed for that particular occasion, and have been historically beaten; and yet I know all the time that I have never been beaten;...
    Wsp 6.235 9 ...[Benedict said] in all the encounters that have yet chanced, I have not been weaponed for that particular occasion, and have been historically beaten; and yet I know all the time that I...have never yet fought...
    Wsp 6.236 6 If [the thought] can spare me [said Benedict], I am sure I can spare it. It shall be the same with my friends. I will never woo the loveliest.
    Wsp 6.241 18 Was never stoicism so stern and exigent as this [new church founded on moral science] shall be.
    CbW 6.261 6 A rich man was never insulted in his life;...
    CbW 6.261 8 A rich man was never in danger from cold...
    CbW 6.265 24 A man should make life and nature happier to us, or he had better never been born.
    CbW 6.266 6 An old French verse runs, in my translation:--Some of your griefs you have cured,/ And the sharpest you still have survived;/ But what torments of pain you endured/ From evils that never arrived!/
    CbW 6.266 7 There are three wants which never can be satisfied...
    CbW 6.273 15 There is a pudency about friendship as about love, and though fine souls never lose sight of it, yet they do not name it.
    CbW 6.277 1 Wherever there is failure, there is...some step omitted, which nature never pardons.
    Bty 6.279 1 Was never form and never face/ So sweet to Seyd as only grace/ Which did not slumber like a stone/ But hovered gleaming and was gone./
    Bty 6.286 15 ...the power of form and our sensibility to personal influence never go out of fashion.
    Bty 6.288 4 ...everybody knows people...who, with all degrees of ability, never impress us with the air of free agency.
    Bty 6.288 11 The remedy seems never to be far off, since the first step into thought lifts this mountain of necessity.
    Bty 6.290 26 The dancing-master can never teach a badly built man to walk well.
    Bty 6.293 1 I have been told by persons of experience in matters of taste that the fashions follow a law of gradation, and are never arbitrary.
    Bty 6.295 26 In our cities an ugly building is soon removed and is never repeated...
    Bty 6.297 24 It does not hurt weak eyes to look into beautiful eyes never so long.
    Bty 6.303 13 Wordsworth rightly speaks of a light that never was on sea or land, meaning that it was supplied by the observer;...
    Bty 6.304 8 Facts which had never before left their stark common sense suddenly figure as Eleusinian mysteries.
    Ill 6.312 22 [the dreariest alderman] wishes the bow and compliment of some leader in the state or in society; weighs what he says; perhaps he never comes nearer to him for that, but dies at last better contented for this amusement of his eyes and his fancy.
    Ill 6.312 25 ...the din of life is never hushed.
    Ill 6.317 8 [The new style or mythology] is like the cement which the peddler sells at the door; he makes broken crockery hold with it, but you can never buy of him a bit of the cement which will make it hold when he is gone.
    Ill 6.317 13 ...[men who make themselves felt in the world] never deeply interest us unless they lift a corner of the curtain...
    Ill 6.317 14 ...[men who make themselves felt in the world] never deeply interest us unless they...betray, never so slightly, their penetration of what is behind [the curtain].
    Ill 6.323 20 The permanent interest of every man is never to be in a false position...
    Ill 6.324 8 Diogenes of Apollonia said that unless the atoms were made of one stuff, they could never blend and act with one another.
    Ill 6.324 23 ...the unities of Truth and of Right are not broken by the disguise. There need never be any confusion in these.
    SS 7.4 23 All [my new friend] wished of his tailor was to provide that sober mean of color and cut which would never detain the eye for a moment.
    SS 7.4 27 [My friend] went to Vienna, to Smyrna, to London. In all the variety of costumes...to his horror he could never discover a man in the street who wore anything like his own dress.
    SS 7.7 20 Dante...was never invited to dinner.
    SS 7.11 4 Never his lands or his rents, but the power to charm the disguised soul that sits veiled under this bearded and that rosy visage is [the scholar's] rent and ration.
    SS 7.11 22 ...the one event which never loses its romance is the encounter with superior persons on terms allowing the happiest intercourse.
    Civ 7.25 26 The highest civility has never loved the hot zones.
    Civ 7.27 22 The farmer had much ill temper, laziness and shirking to endure from his hand-sawyers, until one day he bethought him to put his saw-mill on the edge of a waterfall; and the river never tires of turning his wheel;...
    Civ 7.27 24 The farmer had much ill temper, laziness and shirking to endure from his hand-sawyers, until one day he bethought him to put his saw-mill on the edge of a waterfall;...the river is good-natured, and never hints an objection.
    Civ 7.28 14 ...we managed...to fold up the letter in such invisible compact form as [Electricity] could carry in those invisible pockets of his, never wrought by needle and thread...
    Civ 7.29 21 It is a peremptory rule with [the heavenly powers] that they never go out of their road.
    Civ 7.29 24 ...[the heavenly powers] swerve never from their foreordained paths...
    Art2 7.55 24 It never was in the power of any man or any community to call the arts into being.
    Art2 7.55 27 [The arts] come to serve [man's] actual wants, never to please his fancy.
    Art2 7.56 12 ...all [the arts] sprang out of some genuine enthusiasm, and never out of dilettanteism and holidays.
    Elo1 7.71 12 ...every literature contains these high compliments to the art of the orator and the bard, from the Hebrew and the Greek down to the Scottish Glenkindie, who ...harpit a fish out o' saut-water,/ Or water out of a stone,/ Or milk out of a maiden's breast/ Who bairn had never none./
    Elo1 7.73 6 ...Thucydides, when Archidamus, king of Sparta, asked him which was the best wrestler, Pericles or he, replied, When I throw him, he says he was never down, and he persuades the very spectators to believe him.
    Elo1 7.76 20 We believe that there may be a man who is a match for events, one who never found his match...
    Elo1 7.78 21 [Caesar]...declaimed to [the pirates]; if they did not applaud his speeches, he threatened them with hanging...and in a short time, was master of all on board. A man this is who...can never play his last card...
    Elo1 7.83 12 Poor Tom never knew the time when the present occurrence was so trivial that he could tell what was passing in his mind without being checked for unseasonable speech;...
    Elo1 7.84 4 Pepys says of Lord Clarendon...I did never observe how much easier a man do speak when he knows all the company to be below him, than in him;...
    Elo1 7.90 11 [A trope] is a wonderful aid to the memory, which carries away the image and never loses it.
    Elo1 7.91 22 ...we...might well go round the world, to see...a man...amid the inconceivable levity of human beings, never for an instant warped from his erectness.
    Elo1 7.93 13 ...the main distinction between [the eloquent man] and other well-graced actors is the conviction...that his mind is contemplating a whole... Add to this concentration a certain regnant calmness, which...never utters a premature syllable...and the orator stands before the people as a demoniacal power...
    Elo1 7.99 26 [Eloquence's] great masters...never permitted any talent...to appear for show;...
    DL 7.109 27 Let [a man] never buy anything else than what he wants...
    DL 7.110 1 Let [a man]...never subscribe at others' instance...
    DL 7.110 2 Let [a man]...never give unwillingly.
    DL 7.119 16 There was never a country in the world which could so easily exhibit this heroism as ours;...
    DL 7.119 18 There was...never any [country in the world] where the state has made such efficient provision for popular education...
    DL 7.124 25 We never come to be citizens of the world...
    DL 7.125 20 We have never yet seen a man.
    DL 7.126 24 ...beauty is never quite absent from our eyes.
    DL 7.130 23 The man, the woman, needs not the embellishment of canvas and marble, whose every act is a subject for the sculptor, and to whose eye the gods and nymphs never appear ancient...
    Farm 7.139 1 Nature never hurries...
    Farm 7.142 18 [The farmer's] machine is of colossal proportions;...and it takes him long to understand its parts and its working. This pump never sucks;...
    Farm 7.142 19 [The farmer's] machine is of colossal proportions;...and it takes him long to understand its parts and its working. This pump never sucks; these screws are never loose;...
    Farm 7.142 19 [The farmer's] machine is of colossal proportions;...and it takes him long to understand its parts and its working. This pump never sucks;...this machine is never out of gear;...
    Farm 7.142 21 [The farmer's] machine is of colossal proportions;...and it takes him long to understand its parts and its working. This pump never sucks;...the vat and piston, wheels and tires, never wear out...
    Farm 7.145 5 [Nature]...deals never with dead, but ever with quick subjects.
    Farm 7.147 4 Plant fruit-trees by the roadside, and their fruit will never be allowed to ripen.
    Farm 7.149 12 [Peaches and grapes]...never tell on your table whence they drew their sunset complexion or their delicate flavors.
    Farm 7.153 14 ...living or dying, [the farmer] never shall be heard of in [palaces];...
    WD 7.165 22 Politics were never more corrupt and brutal;...
    WD 7.173 20 Ah! poor dupe, will you never slip out of the web of the master juggler...
    WD 7.173 21 Ah! poor dupe, will you...never learn that as soon as the irrecoverable years have woven their blue glory between to-day and us these passing hours shall glitter and draw us as the wildest romance and the homes of beauty and poetry?
    WD 7.182 17 The masters of English lyric wrote their songs [for joy]. It was a fine efflorescence of fine powers; as was said of the letters of the Frenchwoman,--the charming accident of their more charming existence. Then the poet is never the poorer for his song.
    Boks 7.196 22 ...Never read any book that is not a year old.
    Boks 7.196 23 ...Never read any but famed books.
    Boks 7.196 24 ...Never read any [books] but what you like;...
    Boks 7.197 4 ...I find certain books vital and spermatic, not leaving the reader what he was: he shuts the book a richer man. I would never willingly read any others than such.
    Boks 7.205 10 [The student] cannot spare Gibbon...with such wit and continuity of mind, that, though never profound, his book is one of the conveniences of civilization...
    Boks 7.213 26 [The imagination] has a flute which sets the atoms of our frame in a dance, like planets; and once so liberated...they never quite subside to their old stony state.
    Clbs 7.234 6 In fact the only sin which we never forgive in each other is difference of opinion.
    Clbs 7.239 26 When Henry III. (1217) plead duress against his people demanding confirmation and execution of the Charter, the reply was: If this were admitted, civil wars could never close but by the extirpation of one of the contending parties.
    Clbs 7.241 16 We consider those...who think it the highest compliment they can pay a man...to expose to him the grand and cheerful secrets perhaps never opened to their daily companions...
    Clbs 7.242 9 ...does it never occur that we perhaps live with people too superior to be seen...
    Cour 7.254 16 Men admire...the power of better combination and foresight, however exhibited, whether it only plays a game of chess, or whether...a cunning mathematician...predicts the planet which eyes had never seen;...
    Cour 7.255 10 The third excellence is courage, the perfect will...which...is never quite itself until the hazard is extreme;...
    Cour 7.256 17 How short a time since this whole nation rose every morning to read or hear the traits of courage of its sons and brothers in the field, and was never weary of the theme!
    Cour 7.257 25 A large majority of men...never come to the rough experiences that make the Indian, the soldier or frontiersman self-subsistent and fearless.
    Cour 7.260 2 Nature has made up her mind that what cannot defend itself shall not be defended. Complaining never so loud and with never so much reason is of no use.
    Cour 7.261 5 Tender, amiable boys, who had never encountered any rougher play than a base-ball match...were suddenly drawn up to face a bayonet charge or capture a battery.
    Cour 7.261 23 I knew a young soldier...who confided to his sister that he had made up his mind to volunteer for the war. I have not, he said, any proper courage, but I shall never let any one find it out.
    Cour 7.265 16 Bodily pain is superficial, seated usually in the skin and the extremities...not in the vitals, where the rupture that produces death is perhaps not felt, and the victim never knew what hurt him.
    Cour 7.267 9 Swedenborg has left this record of his king: Charles XII. of Sweden did not know...what that spurious valor and daring [was] that is excited by inebriating draughts, for he never tasted any liquid but pure water.
    Cour 7.267 14 It was told of the Prince of Conde that there not being a more furious man in the world, danger in fight never disturbs him more than just to make him civil...
    Cour 7.270 3 ...I remember the old professor, whose searching mind engraved every word he spoke on the memory of the class, when we asked if he had read this or that shining novelty, No, I have never read that book;...
    Cour 7.274 5 ...practice never comes up with [the religious sentiment].
    Cour 7.275 22 In the most private life, difficult duty is never far off.
    Suc 7.285 22 [Columbus told the King and Queen] I assert that [the pilots] can give no other account than that they went to lands where there was abundance of gold, but they...would be obliged to go on a voyage of discovery as much as if they had never been there before.
    Suc 7.287 17 The [Norse] mother says to her son:--Success shall be in thy courser tall,/ Success in thyself, which is best of all,/ Success in thy hand, success in thy foot,/ In struggle with man, in battle with brute:--/ The holy God and Saint Drothin dear/ Shall never shut eyes on thy career;/...
    Suc 7.289 1 I have heard that Nelson used to say, Never mind the justice or the impudence, only let me succeed.
    Suc 7.294 10 ...the time is never lost that is devoted to work.
    Suc 7.294 11 The good workman never says, There, that will do;...
    Suc 7.297 12 ...has [the scholar or writer] never found that there is a better poetry hinted in a boy's whistle of a tune...than in all his literary results?
    Suc 7.299 3 Wordsworth writes of the delights of the boy in Nature:--For never will come back the hour/ Of splendor in the grass, of glory in the flower./
    Suc 7.301 25 ...I am more interested to know that when at last [Aristotle or Bacon or Kant] have hurled out their grand word, it is only some familiar experience of every man in the street. If it be not, it will never be heard of again.
    Suc 7.303 11 Who is he...who does not like to hear of those sensibilities which...send wonderful eye-beams across assemblies, from one to one, never missing in the thickest crowd?
    Suc 7.306 11 ...the oracles are never silent;...
    Suc 7.306 16 There was never poet who had not the heart in the right place.
    OA 7.323 27 When the pleuro-pneumonia of the cows raged, the butchers said that...there never was a time when this disease did not occur among cattle.
    OA 7.331 7 A literary astrologer, [Goethe] never applied himself to any task but at the happy moment when all the stars consented.
    OA 7.333 5 ...[John Adams]...added, My son has more political prudence that any man that I know who has existed in my time; he never was put off his guard;...
    OA 7.333 18 We inquired when [John Adams] expected to see Mr. [John Quincy] Adams.--He said: Never...
    OA 7.334 10 I...saw [George Whitefield], [John Adams] said, through a window, and distinctly heard all. He had a voice such as I never heard before or since.
    PI 8.3 23 ...the most imaginative and abstracted person never makes with impunity the least mistake in this particular,--never tries to kindle his oven with water...
    PI 8.4 1 ...the most imaginative and abstracted person...never tries to kindle his oven with water...
    PI 8.6 5 The admission, never so covertly, that this [material world] is a makeshift, sets the dullest brain in ferment...
    PI 8.21 7 The poet contemplates the central identity...and, following it, can detect essential resemblances in natures never before compared.
    PI 8.32 3 Free trade, [men of the world] concede, is very well as a principle, but it is never quite the time for its adoption without prejudicing actual interests.
    PI 8.37 11 ...we shall never understand political economy until Burns or Beranger or some poet shall teach it in songs...
    PI 8.40 23 [The poet] has seen something which all the mathematics and the best industry could never bring him unto.
    PI 8.43 9 I have heard that the Germans think the creator of Trim and Uncle Toby, though he never wrote a verse, a greater poet than Cowper...
    PI 8.54 4 Poetry will never be a simple means...
    PI 8.60 4 The Crusades brought out the genius of France, in the twelfth century, when Pierre d'Auvergne said,--I will sing a new song which resounds in my breast, never was a song good or beautiful which resembled any other.
    PI 8.61 17 Ah, sir, said Merlin [to Sir Gawaine], you will never see me more...
    PI 8.61 21 Ah, sir, said Merlin [to Sir Gawaine]...when you shall have departed from this place, I shall nevermore speak to you, nor to any other person, save only my mistress; for never other person will be able to discover this place for anything which may befall;...
    PI 8.61 27 Ah, sir, said Merlin [to Sir Gawaine]...neither shall I ever go out from hence, for in the world there is no such strong tower as this wherein I am confined; and it is...made by enchantment so strong that it can never be demolished while the world lasts;...
    PI 8.62 16 Well, said Merlin, [my captivity] must be borne, for never will [King Arthur] see me...
    PI 8.62 19 Well, said Merlin, [my captivity] must be borne, for never will [King Arthur] see me...neither will any one speak with me again after you, it would be vain to attempt it; for you yourself, when you have turned away, will never be able to find the place...
    PI 8.74 16 I doubt never the riches of Nature...
    SA 8.80 11 The staple figure in novels is the man...who sits, among the young aspirants and desperates...and, never sharing their affections or debilities, hurls his word like a bullet when occasion requires...
    SA 8.80 15 The staple figure in novels is the man...who sits, among the young aspirants and desperates...and, never sharing their affections or debilities...knows his way and carries his points. They may scream or applaud, he is never engaged or heated.
    SA 8.96 3 The great gain is...to find a companion who knows what you do not; to tilt with him and be overthrown...with utter destruction of all your logic and learning. ... Then you...will never accept the counterfeit again.
    SA 8.97 15 Must we always talk for victory, and never once for truth...
    SA 8.98 3 True wit never made us laugh.
    SA 8.98 14 Never worry people with your contritions...
    SA 8.98 16 Never name sickness...
    SA 8.98 23 Everything is unseasonable which is private to two or three or any portion of the company. Tact never violates for a moment this law;...
    SA 8.98 24 Everything is unseasonable which is private to two or three or any portion of the company. Tact...never intrudes the orders of the house...
    SA 8.98 27 ...we never talk shop before company.
    SA 8.103 3 ...I have seen examples of new grace and power in address that honor the country. It was my fortune not long ago...to fall in with an American to be proud of. I said never was such force...combined with such domestic lovely behavior...
    Elo2 8.112 25 There is one of whom we took no note, but on a certain occasion it appears that he has a secret virtue never suspected...
    Elo2 8.113 20 The orator is he whom every man is seeking when he goes... into any popular assembly,--though often disappointed, yet never giving over the hope.
    Elo2 8.114 14 ...you may find [the orator] in some lowly Bethel, by the seaside...a man who never knew the looking-glass or the critic;...
    Elo2 8.114 16 ...you may find [the orator] in some lowly Bethel, by the seaside...a man whom college drill or patronage never made...
    Elo2 8.122 17 ...I never heard [John Quincy Adams] speak in public until his fine voice was much broken by age.
    Elo2 8.124 6 In social converse with the mighty dead of ancient days, you will never smart under the galling sense of dependence upon the mighty living of the present age.
    Elo2 8.125 25 Dr. Johnson said, There is in every nation a style which never becomes obsolete...
    Elo2 8.128 4 I should add what is told of [Dr. Charles Chauncy],--that he so disliked the sensation preaching of his time, that he had once prayed that he might never be eloquent;...
    Elo2 8.131 4 [Eloquence] is the attitude taken, the unmistakable sign, never so casually given...that a greater spirit speaks from you than is spoken to in him.
    Res 8.139 10 Our Copernican globe is a great factory or shop of power, with its rotating constellations, times and tides. The machine is of colossal size;...and it takes long to understand its parts and its workings. This pump never sucks; these screws are never loose;...
    Res 8.139 11 Our Copernican globe is a great factory or shop of power, with its rotating constellations, times and tides. The machine is of colossal size;...and it takes long to understand its parts and its workings. This pump never sucks;...this machine is never out of gear.
    Res 8.139 12 The vat, the piston, the wheels and tires [of the earth], never wear out...
    Res 8.143 8 The creation of power had never any parallel [to that in America].
    Res 8.145 1 The old forester is never far from shelter;...
    Res 8.148 25 See the dexterity of the good aunt in keeping the young people all the weary holiday busy and diverted without knowing it...the pop-corn, and Christmas hemlock spurting in the fire. The children never suspect how much design goes to it...
    Comc 8.157 8 The Reason...meddles never with degrees or fractions;...
    QO 8.180 13 The Paradise Lost had never existed but for these precursors [Virgil and Homer];...
    QO 8.183 11 Thirty years ago...you might often hear cited as Mr. Webster' s three rules: first, never to do to-day what he could defer till to-morrow;...
    QO 8.183 13 Thirty years ago...you might often hear cited as Mr. Webster' s three rules...secondly, never to do himself what he could make another do for him;...
    QO 8.183 14 Thirty years ago...you might often hear cited as Mr. Webster' s three rules...thirdly, never to pay any debt to-day.
    QO 8.192 23 It never troubles the simple seeker from whom he derived such or such a sentiment.
    QO 8.194 23 The passages of Shakspeare that we most prize were never quoted until within this century;...
    QO 8.195 21 Hallam, though never profound, is a fair mind...
    QO 8.196 21 ...many men can write better under a mask than for themselves; as...I doubt not, many a young barrister in chambers in London, who forges good thunder for the Times, but never works as well under his own name.
    QO 8.197 15 ...Mr. Hallam is reported as mentioning at dinner one of his friends who had said, I don't know how it is, a thing that falls flat from me seems quite an excellent joke when given at second hand by Sheridan. I never like my own bon-mots until he adopts them.
    QO 8.200 15 Our country, customs, laws, our ambitions, and our notions of fit and fair,-all these we never made...
    QO 8.201 15 The divine never quotes, but is, and creates.
    QO 8.202 6 Originals never lose their value.
    PC 8.223 9 I shall never believe that centrifugence and centripetence balance, unless mind heats and meliorates...
    PC 8.229 23 Hope never spreads her golden wings but on unfathomable seas.
    PPo 8.243 25 The secret that should not be blown/ Not one of thy nation must know;/ You may padlock the gate of a town,/ But never the mouth of a foe./
    PPo 8.245 21 Good is what goes on the road of Nature. On the straight way the traveller never misses.
    PPo 8.246 3 Loose the knots of the heart; never think on thy fate:/ No Euclid has yet disentangled that snarl./
    PPo 8.256 23 Accept whatever befalls; uncover thy brow from thy locks;/ Never to me nor to thee was option imparted;/...
    PPo 8.257 2 The cedar, the cypress, the palm, the olive and fig-tree, the birds that inhabit them, and the garden flowers, are never wanting in these musky verses [of Hafiz]...
    PPo 8.260 5 [Hafiz's] ingenuity never sleeps...
    PPo 8.261 10 Plunge in yon angry waves,/ Renouncing doubt and care;/ The flowing of the seven broad seas/ Shall never wet thy hair./
    PPo 8.262 4 The falcon answered [the nightingale], Be all ear:/ I, experienced in affairs,/ See fifty things, say never one;/ But thee the people prizes not,/ Who, doing nothing, say'st a thousand./
    PPo 8.262 17 A painter in China once painted a hall;/ Such a web never hung on an emperor's wall;-/ One half from his brush with rich colors did run,/ The other he touched with a beam of the sun;/...
    PPo 8.264 22 [The birds] saw themselves all as Simorg,/ Themselves in the eternal Simorg./ When to the Simorg up they looked,/ They beheld him among themselves;/ And when they looked on each other,/ They saw themselves in the Simorg./ A single look grouped the two parties,/ The Simorg emerged, the Simorg vanished,/ This in that and that in this, As the world has never heard./
    Insp 8.271 21 Every real step is...by lyrical facility, and never by main strength and ignorance.
    Insp 8.280 5 Sydney Smith said: You will never break down in a speech on the day when you have walked twelve miles.
    Insp 8.280 15 A man is spent by his work, starved, prostrate;...he can never think more.
    Insp 8.281 26 The wealth of the mind in this respect of seeing is like that of a looking-glass, which is never tired or worn by any multitude of objects which it reflects.
    Insp 8.283 27 Had I not lived with Mirabeau, says Dumont, I never should have known all that can be done in one day...
    Insp 8.286 18 I remember a capital prudence of old President Quincy, who told me that he never went to bed at night until he had laid out the studies for the next morning.
    Insp 8.287 4 Solitary converse with Nature; for thence are ejaculated sweet and dreadful words never uttered in libraries.
    Insp 8.287 23 Did you never observe, says Gray, while rocking winds are piping loud, that pause, as the gust is recollecting itself...
    Insp 8.296 8 The occasions or predisposing circumstances [of inspiration] I could never tabulate;...
    Insp 8.296 19 ...I can never remember the circumstances to which I owe [a generalization]...
    Grts 8.301 21 ...that which invites all, belongs to us all,-to which we are all sometimes untrue, cowardly, faithless, but of which we never quite despair...
    Grts 8.302 21 ...the scholars represent...the intellect and the moral sentiment,-which in the last analysis can never be separated.
    Grts 8.307 12 A point of education that I can never too much insist upon is this tenet that every individual man has a bias which he must obey...
    Grts 8.307 19 [A man] is never happy nor strong until he finds [his bias], keeps it;...
    Grts 8.307 26 ...in this self-respect or hearkening to the privatest oracle, [a man]...need never be at a loss.
    Grts 8.314 12 Napoleon commands our respect by...the habit of seeing with his own eyes, never the surface, but to the heart of the matter...
    Grts 8.317 9 William Blake the artist frankly says, I never knew a bad man in whom there was not something very good.
    Imtl 8.324 19 There never was a time when the doctrine of a future life was not held.
    Imtl 8.328 26 The name of death was never terrible/ To him that knew to live./
    Imtl 8.330 15 Hear the opinion of Montesquieu: ... Independently of revealed ideas, metaphysical ideas give me a vigorous hope of my eternal well-being, which I would never renounce.
    Imtl 8.330 18 I was lately told of young children who feel a certain terror at the assurance of life without end. What! will it never stop? the child said;...
    Imtl 8.330 19 I was lately told of young children who feel a certain terror at the assurance of life without end. What! will it never stop? the child said; what! never die? never, never? It makes me feel so tired.
    Imtl 8.330 23 ...I have in mind the expression of an older believer, who once said to me, The thought that this frail being is never to end is so overwhelming that my only shelter is God's presence.
    Imtl 8.331 27 ...it chanced that [my friend] never met [his colleague] again until, twenty-five years afterwards, they saw each other through open doors at a distance in a crowded reception at the President's house in Washington.
    Imtl 8.334 12 To breathe, to sleep, is wonderful. But never to know the Cause, the Giver, and infer his character and will!
    Imtl 8.336 25 Nature never moves by jumps...
    Imtl 8.337 16 The love of life...seems to indicate...a conviction of immense resources and possibilities proper to us, on which we have never drawn.
    Imtl 8.341 24 [The thinker] is but as a fly or a worm to this mountain, this continent, which his thoughts inhabit. It is a perception that comes...never to the lazy or rusty mind.
    Imtl 8.343 1 Nature never spares the individual;...
    Imtl 8.347 7 Let any master simply recite to you the substantial laws of the intellect, and in the presence of the laws themselves you will never ask such primary-school questions [concerning immortality].
    Imtl 8.348 3 [Jesus] is never once weak or sentimental;...
    Imtl 8.348 4 ...[Jesus] never preaches the personal immortality;...
    Dem1 10.3 20 Within the sweep of yon encircling wall/ How many a large creation of the night,/ Wide wilderness and mountain, rock and sea,/ Peopled with busy, transitory groups,/ Finds room to rise, and never feels the crowd./
    Dem1 10.5 25 In sleep one shall travel certain roads...or shall walk alone in familiar fields and meadows, which road or which meadow in waking hours he never looked upon.
    Dem1 10.11 20 ...all productions of man are so anthropomorphous that not possibly can he invent any fable that shall not...be true in senses and to an extent never intended by the inventor.
    Dem1 10.12 27 Nature never works like a conjuror...
    Dem1 10.18 24 Seldom or never do [demonic individuals] meet their match among their contemporaries;...
    Dem1 10.21 18 The best are never demoniacal or magnetic;...
    Dem1 10.22 17 The deepest flattery, and that to which we can never be insensible, is the flattery of omens.
    Dem1 10.24 25 Men who had never wondered at anything...have been unable to suppress their amazement at the disclosures of the somnambulist.
    Dem1 10.25 6 The peculiarity of the history of Animal Magnetism is that it drew in as inquirers and students a class of persons never on any other occasion known as students and inquirers.
    Dem1 10.25 18 ...Nature can never be outwitted...
    Aris 10.31 1 There is an attractive topic, which never goes out of vogue...
    Aris 10.34 19 ...if primogeniture, if heraldry, if money could secure such a result as superior and finished men, it would be the interest of all mankind to see that the steps were taken, the pains incurred. No taxation...no conferring of privileges never so exalted would be a price too large.
    Aris 10.37 24 What is the meaning of this invincible respect for war...that we can never quite smother the trumpet and the drum?
    Aris 10.38 14 ...they only prosper or they prosper best...who engineer in sword and cannon style, with energy and sharpness. Why, but because courage never loses its high price?
    Aris 10.45 14 It never troubles the Senator what multitudes crack the benches and bend the galleries to hear.
    Aris 10.45 21 The blood royal never pays, we say.
    Aris 10.47 5 I never feel that any man occupies my place...
    Aris 10.58 13 I have heard that in horsemanship he is not the good rider who never was thrown...
    Aris 10.58 14 I have heard that in horsemanship...a man never will be a good rider until he is thrown;...
    Aris 10.58 23 ...I know no such unquestionable badge and ensign of a sovereign mind, as that tenacity of purpose which...changes never...
    Aris 10.60 3 ...there is an order of men, never quite absent, who enroll no names in their archives but such as are capable of truth.
    Aris 10.60 24 The Golden Table never lacks members;...
    Aris 10.63 2 Pay [money], and you may play the tyrant at discretion and never look back to the fatal question,-where had you the money that you paid?
    PerF 10.69 13 Never was any man too strong for his proper work.
    PerF 10.70 6 See what your robust neighbor, who never feared to live in [the air], has got from it;...
    PerF 10.73 3 The man must bend to the law, never the law to him.
    PerF 10.74 20 Look at [man]; you can give no guess at what power is in him. It never appears directly...
    PerF 10.79 1 The power of persistence...is one of these [mental] forces which never loses its charm.
    PerF 10.81 11 See in a circle of school-girls one with...no special vivacity,-but she can so recite her adventures that she is never alone...
    PerF 10.88 5 ...the cause of right for which we labor never dies...
    Chr2 10.95 9 High instincts, before which our mortal nature/ Doth tremble like a guilty thing surprised,-/ Which, be they what they may,/ Are yet the fountain-light of all our day,/ Are yet the master-light of all our seeing,-/ Uphold us, cherish, and have power to make/ Our noisy years seem moments in the being/ Of the eternal silence,-truths that wake/ To perish never./
    Chr2 10.103 6 The [moral] sentiment never stops in pure vision...
    Chr2 10.110 25 Voltaire was an apostle of Christian ideas; only the names were hostile to him, and he never knew it otherwise.
    Chr2 10.116 21 ...a few clergymen, with a more theological cast of mind, retain the traditions, but they carry them quietly. In general discourse, they are never obtruded.
    Chr2 10.116 25 ...a few clergymen, with a more theological cast of mind, retain the traditions, but they carry them quietly. In general discourse, they are never obtruded. If the clergyman should travel...he might leave them locked up in the same closet with his occasional sermons at home, and, if he did not return, would never think to send for them.
    Chr2 10.117 5 ...the inspirations are never withdrawn.
    Chr2 10.119 5 [Growth] is not dangerous, any more than the mother's withdrawing her hands from the tottering babe, at his first walk across the nursery-floor: the child fears and cries, but achieves the feat...and never wishes to be assisted more.
    Edc1 10.130 24 If Newton come and...perceive...that every atom in Nature draws to every other atom...he reports the condition of millions of worlds which his eye never saw.
    Edc1 10.131 14 In our condition are the roots of language and communication, and these instructions we never exhaust.
    Edc1 10.133 17 When I see...that there is no sot or fop, ruffian or pedant into whom thoughts do not enter by passages which the individual never left open, I can expect any revolution in character.
    Edc1 10.134 14 Why always coast on the surface and never open the interior of Nature...
    Edc1 10.136 16 The old man thinks the young man has no distinct purpose, for he could never get anything intelligible and earnest out of him.
    Edc1 10.143 5 Do not spare to put novels into the hands of young people as an occasional holiday and experiment; but, above all, good poetry in all kinds, epic, tragedy, lyric. If we can touch the imagination...they will never forget it.
    Supl 10.164 26 'T is very wearisome, this straining talk, these experiences all exquisite, intense and tremendous,-The best I ever saw; I never in my life!
    Supl 10.165 14 Thousands of people live and die who were never...hungry or thirsty...
    Supl 10.169 4 'T is a good rule of rhetoric which Schlegel gives,-In good prose, every word is underscored; which, I suppose, means, Never italicize.
    Supl 10.169 6 Spartans, stoics, heroes, saints and gods use a short and positive speech. They are never off their centres.
    Supl 10.175 4 In all the years that I have sat in town and forest, I never saw a winged dragon...
    Supl 10.175 14 [Nature] never expatiates, never goes into the reasons.
    SovE 10.189 25 ...that can never be good for the bee which is bad for the hive.
    SovE 10.192 10 The student discovers one day that he lives in enchantment...and through this enchanted gallery he is led by unseen guides to read and learn the laws of Heaven. This discovery may come early...and to multitudes of men wanting in mental activity it never comes...
    SovE 10.194 25 Wondrous state of man! never so happy as when he has lost all private interests and regards...
    SovE 10.195 25 Truth gathers itself spotless and unhurt...never hurt by the treachery or ruin of its best defenders...
    SovE 10.196 11 ...we are never without a pilot.
    SovE 10.197 1 ...I have never until now dreamed that this undertaking the entire management of my own affairs was not commendable.
    SovE 10.197 3 ...I have never until now dreamed that this undertaking the entire management of my own affairs was not commendable. I have never seen, until now, that it dwarfed me.
    SovE 10.204 14 ...cordage and machinery never supply the place of life.
    SovE 10.205 1 I will not now go into the metaphysics of that reaction by which in history a period of belief is followed by an age of criticism, in which...an excessive respect for forms out of which the heart has departed becomes more obvious in the least religious minds. I will not now explore the causes of the result, but the fact must be conceded...and never more evident than in our American church.
    SovE 10.207 7 Revolutions never go backward...
    SovE 10.207 13 The human mind, when it is trusted, is never false to itself.
    SovE 10.207 20 The mystic or theist is never scared by any startling materialism.
    SovE 10.207 23 [The mystic or theist] knows the laws of gravitation and of repulsion are deaf to French talkers, be they never so witty.
    SovE 10.207 27 ...the most accomplished culture, or rapt holiness, never exhausted the claim of these lowly duties...
    SovE 10.208 2 ...the most accomplished culture, or rapt holiness, never exhausted the claim of these lowly duties,-never penetrated to their origin...
    SovE 10.212 5 The commanding fact which I never do not see, is the sufficiency of the moral sentiment.
    Prch 10.219 12 We never do quite nothing, or never need.
    Prch 10.233 13 The author...falters never, but takes the victorious tone.
    Prch 10.235 11 ...emphasize your choice by utter ignoring of all that you reject;...seeing that a sentiment never loses its pathos or its persuasion...
    Prch 10.236 12 We shall find...a certain originality and a certain haughty liberty proceeding out of our retirement and self-communion, which streets can never give...
    Prch 10.236 16 It is true that which they say of our New England oestrum, which will never let us stand or sit...
    Prch 10.238 4 We [in the Church] come...to know that though ministers of justice and power fail, Justice and Power fail never.
    Schr 10.272 2 ...there was never anything that did not proceed from a thought.
    Schr 10.272 22 [The scholar] is the attorney of the world, and can never be superfluous where so vast a variety of questions are ever coming up to be solved...
    Schr 10.273 13 We who should be the channel of that unweariable Power which never sleeps, must give our diligence no holidays.
    Schr 10.281 8 We are not afraid of new truth, of truth never...no, but of a counterfeit.
    Schr 10.281 22 Have you a thought in your heart? There was never such need of it as now.
    Plu 10.293 20 ...[Plutarch]...appears never to have been in Rome but on two occasions...
    Plu 10.294 6 ...[Plutarch]...with one or two doubtful exceptions, never quotes a Latin book;...
    Plu 10.294 12 ...[Plutarch's] name is never mentioned by any Roman writer.
    Plu 10.294 19 ...[Plutarch's] books were never known to the world in their own Greek tongue...
    Plu 10.298 1 ...though [Plutarch] never used verse, he had many qualities of the poet...
    Plu 10.301 3 [Plutarch's] vivacity and abundance never leave him to loiter or pound on an incident.
    Plu 10.305 22 Many of [Plutarch's discourses] are mere sketches or notes for chapters in preparation, which were never digested or finished.
    Plu 10.310 4 [Some of Plutarch's works] are...very crude opinions; many of them so puerile that one would believe that Plutarch in his haste adopted the notes of his younger auditors, some of them jocosely misreporting the dogma of the professor, who laid them aside as memoranda for future revision, which he never gave...
    Plu 10.310 23 [Plutarch] quotes Thucydides's saying that not the desire of honor only never grows old, but much less also the inclination to society and affection to the State...
    Plu 10.311 12 'T is almost inevitable to compare Plutarch with Seneca, who...was for many years his contemporary, though they never met...
    LLNE 10.326 16 This perception [that the individual is the world] is a sword such as was never drawn before.
    LLNE 10.333 5 In the pulpit...[Everett] gave the reins to his florid, quaint and affluent fancy. Then was exhibited all the richness of a rhetoric which we have never seen rivalled in this country.
    LLNE 10.333 18 All [Everett's] speech was music, and with such variety and invention that the ear was never tired.
    LLNE 10.339 20 [Channing] could never be reported...
    LLNE 10.345 14 There was a pilgrim in those days walking in the country who stopped at every door where he hoped to find hearing for his doctrine, which was, Never to give or receive money.
    LLNE 10.348 15 [Fourier's] ciphering goes where ciphering never went before...
    LLNE 10.357 11 [Thoreau said] I have never got over my surprise that I should have been born into the most estimable place in all the world...
    LLNE 10.363 8 [Charles Newcomb was] A fine, subtle, inward genius...yet with an aplomb like a general, never disconcerted.
    CSC 10.373 19 This [Chardon Street] Convention never printed any report of its deliberations,
    EzRy 10.382 18 Many of the students [at Harvard] entered the [Revolutionary] army, and [Ezra Ripley's] class never returned to Cambridge.
    EzRy 10.385 24 Trained in this [New England] church...it was never out of [Ezra Ripley's] mind.
    EzRy 10.393 15 ...[Ezra Ripley's] mark was never remote.
    MMEm 10.397 1 The yesterday doth never smile,/ To-day goes drudging through the while,/ Yet in the name of Godhead, I/ The morrow front and can defy;/ Though I am weak, yet God, when prayed,/ Cannot withhold his conquering aid./
    MMEm 10.403 11 My opinion, [Mary Moody Emerson] writes, [is] that a mind like Byron's would never be satisfied with modern Unitarianism...
    MMEm 10.403 18 [Mary Moody Emerson's] wit was so fertile, and only used to strike, that she never used it for display...
    MMEm 10.404 7 [Mary Moody Emerson] writes to her nephew Charles Emerson, in 1833: I could never have adorned a garden.
    MMEm 10.404 10 [Mary Moody Emerson] writes to her nephew Charles Emerson, in 1833... I never expected connections and matrimony.
    MMEm 10.404 14 [Mary Moody Emerson] writes to her nephew Charles Emerson, in 1833... I never expected connections and matrimony. My taste was formed in romance, and I knew I was not destined to please. I love God and his creation as I never else could.
    MMEm 10.407 4 I was disappointed, [Mary Moody Emerson] writes, in finding my little Calvinist...a cold little thing who...is looked up to as a specimen of genius. I performed a mission in secretly undermining his vanity, or trying to. Alas! never done but by mortifying affliction.
    MMEm 10.408 23 [Mary Moody Emerson] writes...My oddities were never designed...
    MMEm 10.412 6 I [Mary Moody Emerson] am so small in my expectations, that a week of industry delights. Rose before light every morn;...washed, carded, cleaned house, and baked. To-day cannot recall an error, nor scarcely a sacrifice, but more fulness of content in the labors of a day never was felt.
    MMEm 10.413 7 I [Mary Moody Emerson] walked yesterday five or more miles...just fit for the society I went into, all mildness and the most commonplace virtue. The lady is celebrated for her cleverness, and she was never so good to me.
    MMEm 10.416 20 ...the simple principle which made me [Mary Moody Emerson] say...that, should He make me a blot on the fair face of his Creation, I should rejoice in His will, has never been equalled...
    MMEm 10.418 3 My [Mary Moody Emerson's] uncle has been the means of lessening my property. Ridiculous to wound him for that. He was honestly seeking his own. But at last, this very night, the bargain is closed, and I am delighted with myself:-my dear self has done well. Never did I so exult in a trifle.
    MMEm 10.418 23 Should I [Mary Moody Emerson] take so much care to save a few dollars? Never was I so much ashamed.
    MMEm 10.419 4 I [Mary Moody Emerson] walked to Captain Dexter's. Sick. Promised never to put that ring on.
    MMEm 10.419 23 I [Mary Moody Emerson] had ten dollars a year for clothes and charity, and I never remember to have been needy...
    MMEm 10.419 24 I [Mary Moody Emerson] had ten dollars a year for clothes and charity, and I never remember to have been needy, though I never had but two or three aids in those six years of earning my home.
    MMEm 10.421 13 Alone, feeling strongly, fully, that I [Mary Moody Emerson] have deserved nothing; according to Adam Smith's idea of society, done nothing; doing nothing, never expect to;...
    MMEm 10.424 11 Hail requiem of departed Time! Never was incumbent's funeral followed by expectant heir with more satisfaction.
    MMEm 10.424 24 ...He who formed thy [Time's] web, who stretched thy warp from long ages...has attuned [man's] mind in such unison with the harp of the universe, that he is never without some chord of hope's music.
    MMEm 10.426 25 Never do the feelings of the Infinite and the consciousness of finite frailty and ignorance harmonize so well as at this mystic season in the deserts of life.
    MMEm 10.428 27 ...as [Mary Moody Emerson] never travelled without being provided for this dear and indispensable contingency [death], I believe she wore out a great many [shrouds].
    MMEm 10.429 15 [God] communicates this our condition and humble waiting, or I [Mary Moody Emerson] should never perceive Him.
    MMEm 10.429 25 ...I [Mary Moody Emerson] am resigned to being nothing, never expect a palm, a laurel, hereafter.
    MMEm 10.431 11 [Mary Moody Emerson] checks herself amid her passionate prayers for immediate communion with God;-I who never made a sacrifice to record...
    SlHr 10.445 1 [Samuel Hoar's] ability lay in the clear apprehension and the powerful statement of the material points of his case. He soon possessed it, and he never possessed it better...
    SlHr 10.447 5 [Samuel Hoar] never shrunk from a disagreeable duty.
    Thor 10.452 2 After completing his experiments [on lead-pencils], [Thoreau] exhibited his work to chemists and artists in Boston, and having obtained their certificates to its excellence...he returned home contented. His friends congratulated him that he had now opened his way to fortune. But he replied that he should never make another pencil.
    Thor 10.452 7 [Thoreau] resumed his endless walks and miscellaneous studies...though as yet never speaking of zoology or botany...
    Thor 10.452 22 ...it required rare decision to...keep [Thoreau's] solitary freedom at the cost of disappointing the natural expectations of his family and friends: all the more difficult that he...was exact in securing his own independence, and in holding every man to the like duty. But Thoreau never faltered.
    Thor 10.453 2 Never idle or self-indulgent, [Thoreau] preferred, when he wanted money, earning it by some piece of manual labor agreeable to him...
    Thor 10.454 7 ...[Thoreau] never married;...
    Thor 10.454 7 ...[Thoreau] never went to church;...
    Thor 10.454 8 ...[Thoreau] never voted;...
    Thor 10.454 10 ...[Thoreau] ate no flesh, he drank no wine, he never knew the use of tobacco;...
    Thor 10.455 10 [Thoreau]...never had a vice in his life.
    Thor 10.455 14 [Thoreau] said,-I have a faint recollection of pleasure derived from smoking dried lily-stems, before I was a man. I had commonly a supply of these. I have never smoked anything more noxious.
    Thor 10.463 7 [Thoreau!s] trenchant sense was never stopped by his rules of daily prudence...
    Thor 10.463 14 [Thoreau] said,-You can sleep near the railroad, and never be disturbed...
    Thor 10.463 19 [Thoreau] said...Nature knows very well what sounds are worth attending to, and has made up her mind not to hear the railroad-whistle. But things respect the devout mind, and a mental ecstasy was never interrupted.
    Thor 10.465 12 [Thoreau's] own dealing with [young men of sensibility] was never affectionate, but superior...
    Thor 10.468 5 [Thoreau] seemed a little envious of the Pole, for the coincident sunrise and sunset, or five minutes' day after six months, a splendid fact, which Annursnuc had never afforded him.
    Thor 10.470 20 Presently [Thoreau] heard a note which he called that of the night-warbler, a bird he had never identified...
    Thor 10.471 7 ...the meaning of Nature was never attempted to be defined by [Thoreau].
    Thor 10.472 13 ...[Thoreau] would carry you...even to his most prized botanical swamp,-possibly knowing that you could never find it again...
    Thor 10.475 21 ...[Thoreau] have not the poetic temperament, he never lacks the causal thought...
    Thor 10.480 9 ...the blockheads were not born in Concord; but who said they were? It was their unspeakable misfortune to be born in London, or Paris, or Rome; but...they did what they could, considering that they never saw Bateman's Pond...
    Thor 10.481 8 ...[Thoreau]...never willingly walked in the road...
    Carl 10.498 6 [Carlyle] never feared the face of man.
    GSt 10.502 21 [George Stearns] never asked any one to give so much as he himself gave...
    GSt 10.504 21 I have heard...that [George Stearns] was indignant at this or that man's behavior, but never that his anger outlasted for a moment the mischief done or threatened to the good cause...
    GSt 10.506 7 ...this sudden association now with the leaders of parties and persons of pronounced power and influence in the nation...never altered... one trait of [George Stearns's] manners.
    GSt 10.507 1 ...when I consider...that [George Stearns]...was never called to suffer under the decays and loss of his powers...I count him happy among men.
    LS 11.3 5 In the history of the Church no subject has been more fruitful of controversy than the Lord's Supper. There never has been any unanimity in the understanding of its nature...
    LS 11.12 11 These views of the original account of the Lord's Supper lead me to esteem it an occasion full of solemn and prophetic interest, but never intended by Jesus to be the foundation of a perpetual institution.
    LS 11.17 25 I fear it is the effect of this ordinance [the Lord's Supper] to clothe Jesus with an authority which he never claimed...
    LS 11.20 17 ...an importance is given by Christians to [the Lord's Supper] which never can belong to any form.
    HDC 11.28 1 I will have never a noble,/ No lineage counted great;/ Fishers and choppers and ploughmen/ Shall constitute a state./
    HDC 11.35 10 The great cost of cattle, and the sickening of [the pilgrims'] cattle upon such wild fodder as was never cut before;...are the other disasters enumerated by the historian [Edward Johnson].
    HDC 11.37 11 When you came over the morning waters, said one of the Sachems, we took you into our arms. We fed you with our best meat. Never went white man cold and hungry from Indian wigwam.
    HDC 11.62 6 After Philip's death, [the Indians'] strength was irrecoverably broken. They never more disturbed the interior settlements...
    HDC 11.75 22 [The minute-men] never dreamed their children would contend who had done the most.
    HDC 11.86 18 ...I believe this town [Concord] to have been the dwelling-place... of pious and excellent persons...who served God, and loved man, and never let go the hope of immortality.
    LVB 11.92 18 The piety, the principle that is left in the United States... forbid us to entertain [the relocation of the Cherokees] as a fact. Such a dereliction of all faith and virtue, such a denial of justice...were never heard of in times of peace...
    EWI 11.107 3 ...(tracing the subject to natural principles, the claim of slavery never can be supported).
    EWI 11.107 4 ...(tracing the subject to natural principles, the claim of slavery never can be supported). The power claimed by this return never was in use here.
    EWI 11.108 24 The facts [of the slave trade] confirmed [Thomas Clarkson' s] sentiment, that Providence had never made that to be wise which was immoral...
    EWI 11.115 1 I have never read anything in history more touching than the moderation of the negroes [at the news of emancipation in the West Indies].
    EWI 11.143 16 Eaters and food are in the harmony of Nature; and there too is the germ forever protected, unfolding...a richer fruit, in every period, yet its next product is never to be guessed.
    War 11.162 19 ...we never make much account of objections which merely respect the actual state of the world at this moment...
    War 11.169 21 ...as far as [the charge of absurdity on the extreme peace doctrine] respects individual action in difficult and extreme cases, I will say, such cases seldom or never occur to the good and just man;...
    War 11.169 24 A wise man will never impawn his future being and action...
    War 11.171 13 [The peace principle] can never be defended, it can never be executed, by cowards.
    War 11.171 14 [The peace principle] can never be defended, it can never be executed, by cowards.
    War 11.172 8 The attractiveness of war shows one thing...this namely, the conviction of man universally, that...that [a man]...should be himself a kingdom and a state;...really poorer if government, law and order went by the board;...because he...never needs to ask another what in any crisis it behooves him to do.
    FSLC 11.178 7 ...[Eternal Rights] reach no term, they never sleep,/ In equal strength through space abide;/...
    FSLC 11.179 16 I have lived all my life in this state [Massachusetts], and never had any experience of personal inconvenience from the laws, until now.
    FSLC 11.179 18 [Massachusetts laws] never came near me to any discomfort before.
    FSLC 11.183 1 [The crisis over the Fugitive Slave Law]...showed...that the resolutions of public bodies, or the pledges never so often given and put on record of public men, will not bind them.
    FSLC 11.183 21 I question the value of our civilization, when I see that the public mind had never less hold of the strongest of all truths.
    FSLC 11.186 2 [The devil] was never known to abate a penny of his rents.
    FSLC 11.186 6 ...of the corrupt society that exists we have never been able to combine any pure prosperity.
    FSLC 11.206 7 The South does not like the North...and never did.
    FSLC 11.207 22 Since it is agreed by all sane men of all parties...that slavery is mischievous, why does the South itself never offer the smallest counsel of her own?
    FSLC 11.207 24 Since it is agreed by all sane men of all parties...that slavery is mischievous, why does the South itself never offer the smallest counsel of her own? I have never heard in twenty years any project except Mr. Clay's.
    FSLC 11.208 21 It is really the great task fit for this country to accomplish, to buy that property of the planters, as the British nation bought the West Indian slaves. I say buy,-never conceding the right of the planter to own, but that we may acknowledge the calamity of his position...
    FSLC 11.211 27 The ancient maxim still holds that never was any injustice effected except by the help of justice.
    FSLC 11.212 14 We will never intermeddle with your slavery...
    FSLN 11.219 3 I have lived all my life without suffering any known inconvenience from American Slavery. I never saw it; I never heard the whip;...
    FSLN 11.219 4 ...I never felt the check on my free speech and action, until, the other day, when Mr. Webster, by his personal influence, brought the Fugitive Slave Law on the country.
    FSLN 11.222 7 ...[Webster]...never indulged in a weak flourish...
    FSLN 11.228 19 I said I had never in my life up to this time suffered from the Slave Institution.
    FSLN 11.232 19 Events roll...the result is the enforcing of some of those first commandments which we heard in the nursery. We never get beyond our first lesson...
    FSLN 11.240 15 Liberty is never cheap.
    AsSu 11.249 23 [Charles Sumner] has never faltered in his maintenance of justice and freedom.
    AKan 11.258 10 I think there never was a people so choked and stultified by forms.
    JBB 11.272 11 If judges cannot find law enough to maintain the sovereignty of the state...it is idle to compliment them as learned and venerable. What avails their learning or veneration? At a pinch, they are no more use than idiots. After the mischance they wring their hands, but they had better never have been born.
    JBS 11.277 22 [John Brown] said that he loved rough play, could never have rough play enough;...
    TPar 11.286 3 Theodore Parker was...of a diligence that never tired...
    TPar 11.288 7 'T is plain to me...that [Theodore Parker] has so woven himself in these few years into the history of Boston, that he can never be left out of your annals.
    TPar 11.289 1 [Theodore Parker] never kept back the truth for fear to make an enemy.
    ACiv 11.300 25 ...interests were never persuaded.
    ACiv 11.302 12 There never was such a combination as this of ours...
    ACiv 11.304 19 On the climbing scale of progress, [the Southerner] is just up to war, and has never appeared to such advantage as in the last twelvemonth.
    ACiv 11.306 4 We fancy that the endless debate...has brought the free states to some conviction that it can never go well with us whilst this mischief of slavery remains in our politics...
    ALin 11.328 12 How beautiful to see/ Once more a shepherd of mankind indeed,/ Who loved his charge, but never loved to lead;/...
    ALin 11.330 9 [Lincoln] was thoroughly American, had never crossed the sea...
    ALin 11.330 9 [Lincoln] was thoroughly American...had never been spoiled by English insularity or French dissipation;...
    ALin 11.335 10 In four years...[Lincoln's] endurance, his fertility of resources, his magnanimity, were sorely tried and never found wanting.
    HCom 11.342 23 Many of [our young men] had never handled a gun.
    HCom 11.342 26 [Our young men] said, It is not in me to resist. I go [to war] because I must. It is a duty which I shall never forgive myself if I decline.
    SMC 11.357 16 At a halt in the march, a few of our boys were sitting on a rail fence, talking together whether it was right to sacrifice themselves. One of them said...he thought one was never too young to die for a principle.
    SMC 11.359 16 [George Prescott] was a man...who never fancied himself a philosopher or a saint;...
    SMC 11.359 25 ...the [Civil] war...disclosed in [George Prescott]...a serious devotion to the cause of the country that never swerved...
    SMC 11.359 26 ...the [Civil] war...disclosed in [George Prescott]...a serious devotion to the cause of the country that never swerved, a hope that never failed.
    SMC 11.361 23 [George Prescott] never remits his care of the men...
    SMC 11.362 22 [George Prescott writes] This lieutenant seems to think that these men, who never saw a gun, can drill as well as he, who has been at West Point four years.
    SMC 11.372 5 On the thirtieth, we learn, our regiment [the Thirty-second] has never been in the second line since we crossed the Rapidan, on the third.
    Wom 11.406 7 Weirdes all, said the Edda, Frigga knoweth, though she telleth them never.
    Wom 11.416 9 ...that Cause [antagonism to Slavery] turned out to be a great scholar. He was a terrible metaphysician. He was a jurist, a poet, a divine. Was never a University of Oxford or Gottingen that made such students.
    Wom 11.425 22 Every woman being the...wife, daughter, sister, mother, of a man, she can never be very far from his ear...
    Wom 11.425 23 Every woman being the...wife, daughter, sister, mother, of a man, she can never be very far from his ear, never not of his counsel...
    SHC 11.430 13 ...the irresistible democracy-shall I call it?-of chemistry, of vegetation, which recomposes for new life every decomposing particle,- the race never dying, the individual never spared,-have impressed on the mind of the age the futility of these old arts of preserving.
    RBur 11.443 12 The memory of Burns,-every man's, every boy's and girl' s head carries snatches of his songs, and they say them by heart, and, what is strangest of all, never learned them from a book...
    Shak1 11.450 22 There never was a writer who, seeming to draw every hint from outward history, the life of cities and courts, owed them so little [as Shakespeare].
    Shak1 11.450 25 You shall never find in this world the barons or kings [Shakespeare] depicted.
    Shak1 11.451 18 How good and sound and inviolable [Shakespeare's] innocency, that is never to seek, and never wrong...
    Shak1 11.451 19 How good and sound and inviolable [Shakespeare's] innocency, that is never to seek, and never wrong...
    Humb 11.459 1 I know that we have been accustomed to think...that because [the Germans] reflect, they never resolve...
    FRO2 11.486 18 ...St. Augustine writes: That which is now called the Christian religion...never did not exist from the planting of the human race until Christ came in the flesh...
    FRO2 11.488 20 ...[miraculous dispensation] is contrary to that law of Nature which all wise men recognize; namely, never to require a larger cause than is necessary to the effect.
    CPL 11.496 20 Our founder [of the Concord Library] has found the many admirable examples...of benefactors who have not waited to bequeath colleges and hospitals, but have themselves built them, reminding us of Sir Isaac Newton's saying, that they who give nothing before their death, never in fact give at all.
    CPL 11.499 17 ...[Mary Moody Emerson] writes in her diary, Life truly resembles a river-ever the same-never the same;...
    CPL 11.499 25 [Mary Moody Emerson writes] I think that you never enjoy so much as in solitude with a book that meets the feelings...
    CPL 11.502 14 [Thought] cannot be contained in any cup, though you shut the lid never so tight.
    CPL 11.505 5 [Montesquieu writes] Study has been for me the sovereign remedy against the disgusts of life, never having had a chagrin which an hour of reading has not put to flight.
    FRep 11.515 8 No interest not attaches...to the wars of German, French and Spanish emperors, which were only dynastic wars, but to those in which a principle was involved. These...never lose their pathos by time.
    FRep 11.530 12 The revolution [in America] is...the eternal effervescence of Nature. It never did not work.
    FRep 11.530 14 ...we say that revolutions beat all the insurgents, be they never so determined and politic;...
    FRep 11.530 19 Never country had such a fortune...as this...
    FRep 11.531 5 If we never put on the liberty-cap until we were freemen by love and self-denial, the liberty-cap would mean something.
    FRep 11.536 24 Of no use are the men...who can never understand that to-day is a new day.
    FRep 11.536 25 There never was such a combination as this of ours...
    FRep 11.538 5 The beautiful is never plentiful.
    PLT 12.5 8 In astronomy, vast distance, but we never go into a foreign system.
    PLT 12.5 10 In geology, vast duration, but we are never strangers.
    PLT 12.25 13 I never hear a good speech at caucus or at cattle-show but it helps me...
    PLT 12.32 8 Teach me never so much and I hear or retain only that which I wish to hear...
    PLT 12.32 22 Perhaps creatures live with us which we never see, because their motion is too swift for our vision.
    PLT 12.34 27 Ever at intervals leaps a word or fact to light which is no man's invention, but the common instinct, making the revolutions that never go back.
    PLT 12.35 8 Instinct is a shapeless giant in the cave...Behemoth...always whole, never distributed...
    PLT 12.35 9 Instinct is a shapeless giant in the cave...Behemoth... aboriginal...and saying, like poor Topsy, never was born; growed.
    PLT 12.38 11 The point of interest is here, that these gates [spiritual facts], once opened, never swing back.
    PLT 12.38 18 The thought, the doctrine, the right hitherto not affirmed is published...in conversation...of men of the world, and at last in the very choruses of songs. The young hear it, and as they have never fought it...they accept it...
    PLT 12.38 18 The thought, the doctrine, the right hitherto not affirmed is published...in conversation...of men of the world, and at last in the very choruses of songs. The young hear it, and as they...have never known it otherwise, they accept it...
    PLT 12.39 8 A man of talent has only to name any form or fact with which we are most familiar, and the strong light which he throws on it enhances it to all eyes. People wonder they never saw it before.
    PLT 12.44 12 If you cut or break in two a block or stone and press the two parts closely together, you can indeed bring the particles very near, but never again so near that they shall attract each other so that you can take up the block as one.
    PLT 12.57 18 The men we know, poets, wits, writers, deal with their thoughts as jewellers with jewels, which they sell but must not wear. Like the carpenter, who gives up the key of the fine house he has built, and never enters it again.
    PLT 12.61 6 Ideal and practical...are never parallel.
    II 12.65 14 [Instinct] is that which never pretends...
    II 12.66 11 None of the metaphysicians have prospered in describing this power [consciousness], which...is the corrector of private excesses and mistakes;...of a balance which is never lost, not even in the insane.
    II 12.70 5 The star climbs for a time the heaven, but never reaches its zenith;...
    II 12.70 11 Even those we call great men build substructures, and, like Cologne Cathedral, these are never finished.
    II 12.70 19 If you press [those we call great men], they fly to a new topic... but they never complete their work.
    II 12.71 6 The divine energy never rests or repeats itself...
    II 12.75 14 ...Nature is stronger than your will, and were you never so vigilant, you may rely on it, your nature and genius will certainly give your vigilance the slip though it had delirium tremens, and will educate the children by the inevitable infusions of its quality.
    II 12.75 23 That virtue which was never taught us, we cannot teach others.
    II 12.78 8 [Truth] is a gun with a recoil which will knock down the most nimble artillerists, and therefore is never fired.
    II 12.82 15 [A man] is strong by his genius, gets all his knowledge only through that aperture. Society is unanimous against his project. He never hears it as he knows it.
    Mem 12.92 13 You say, I can never think of some act of neglect, of selfishness, or of passion without pain.
    Mem 12.94 12 You say the first words of the old song, and I finish the line and stanza. But where I have them, or what becomes of them when I am not thinking of them...never any man...could turn himself inside out quick enough to find.
    Mem 12.95 3 Never was truer fable than that of the Sibyl's writing on leaves which the wind scatters.
    Mem 12.99 4 ...there is strength in the wild horse which is never regained when he is once broken by training...
    Mem 12.99 7 ...there is a sound sleep of children and of savages...which never visits the eyes of civil gentlemen...
    Mem 12.101 21 They say in Architecture, An arch never sleeps;....
    Mem 12.105 8 The Persians say, A real singer will never forget the song he has once learned.
    Mem 12.108 6 I have several times forgotten the name of Flamsteed, never that of Newton;...
    CInt 12.116 19 These are giddy times, and, you say, the college will be deserted. No, never was it so much needed.
    CInt 12.118 1 Never was pure valor...shown in a bad cause.
    CInt 12.118 2 Never was pure valor-and almost I might say, never pure ability-shown in a bad cause.
    CInt 12.127 19 Ah, gentlemen, it's only a dream of mine, and perhaps never will be true,-but I thought a college was a place not to train talents... but to adorn Genius...
    CInt 12.130 25 Power never departs from [truth].
    CL 12.141 20 You shall never break down in a speech, said Sydney Smith, on the day on which you have walked twelve miles.
    CL 12.143 6 The light which resides in [Wordsworth's eyes]...under favorable accidents...is more truly entitled to be held the light that never was on land or sea...
    CL 12.144 27 ...'t is a commonplace, which I have frequently heard spoken in Illinois, that it was a manifest leading of the Divine Providence that the New England states should have been first settled before the Western country was known, or they would never have been settled at all.
    CL 12.148 1 I admire the taste which makes the avenue to a house, were the house never so small, through a wood;...
    CL 12.165 27 The geology, the astronomy, the anatomy, are all good, but 't is all a half, and-enlarge it by astronomy never so far-remains a half.
    CW 12.172 20 When I go into a good garden, I think, if it were mine, I should never go out of it.
    CW 12.174 24 Make a calendar...of the year, that you may never miss your favorites [among the plants] in their month.
    CW 12.175 22 I admire the taste which makes the avenue to the house- were the house never so small-through a wood;...
    CW 12.176 7 In walking with Allston, you shall see what was never before shown to the eye of man.
    Bost 12.192 9 The lions have never appeared [in Massachusetts] since,- nor before.
    Bost 12.192 11 [The Massachusetts colonists'] crops suffered from pigeons and mice. Nature has never again indulged in these exasperations.
    Bost 12.198 4 We can show [in New England] native examples, and I may almost say (travellers as we are) natives who never crossed the sea, who possess all the elements of noble behavior.
    Bost 12.202 19 The soul of a political party is by no means usually the officers and pets of the party, who...spend the salaries. No, but...the men who are never contented and never to be contented with the work actually accomplished...
    Bost 12.202 20 The soul of a political party is by no means usually the officers and pets of the party, who...spend the salaries. No, but...the men who are never contented and never to be contented with the work actually accomplished...
    Bost 12.202 23 The soul of a political party is by no means usually the officers and pets of the party, who...spend the salaries. No, but the theorists and extremists...these men will...never tire in carrying their point.
    Bost 12.203 3 Boston never wanted a good principle of rebellion in it...
    Bost 12.204 8 Nature...never gives without measure.
    Bost 12.205 25 ...there was never, I suppose, a more rapid expansion in population, wealth and all the elements of power, and in the citizens' consciousness of power and sustained assertion of it, than was exhibited here.
    Bost 12.207 4 From Roger Williams...down to...William Garrison, there never was wanting [in Boston] some thorn of dissent and innovation and heresy to prick the sides of conservatism.
    MAng1 12.213 1 Never did sculptor's dream unfold/ A form which marble doth not hold/ In its white block;.../
    MAng1 12.221 18 Those who have never given attention to the arts of design are surprised that the artist should find so much to study in a fabric of such limited parts and dimensions as the human body.
    MAng1 12.222 24 Goethe says that he is but half himself who has never seen the Juno in the Rondanini Palace at Rome.
    MAng1 12.223 7 The love of beauty which never passes beyond outline and color was too slight an object to occupy the powers of [Michelangelo's] genius.
    MAng1 12.227 21 ...not only was this discoverer of Beauty [Michelangelo]...rooted and grounded in those severe laws of practical skill, which genius can never teach...but he was one of the most industrious men that ever lived.
    MAng1 12.233 7 [Michelangelo] never made but one portrait...
    MAng1 12.237 9 [Michelangelo]...never or very rarely took his meals with any person.
    MAng1 12.237 19 ...[Michelangelo]...never would receive a present from any person;...
    MAng1 12.240 24 Condivi, his friend, has left this testimony; I have often heard Michael Angelo reason and discourse upon love, but never heard him speak otherwise than upon platonic love.
    MAng1 12.240 27 [Condivi wrote] As for me...this I know very well, that in a long intimacy, I never heard from [Michelangelo's] mouth a single word that was not perfectly decorous...
    Milt1 12.249 21 ...the piece [a tract by Milton] shows all the rambles and resources of indignation, but he has never integrated the parts of the argument in his mind.
    Milt1 12.265 10 [Milton's] native honor never forsook him.
    Milt1 12.270 20 ...drawn into the great controversies of the times, [Milton] is never lost in a party.
    Milt1 12.274 23 [Milton's] fancy is never transcendent, extravagant;...
    Milt1 12.279 1 We have offered no apology for expanding to such length our commentary on the character of John Milton;...a man whom labor or danger never deterred from whatever efforts a love of the supreme interests of man prompted.
    ACri 12.284 5 There is, in every nation, a style which never becomes obsolete...
    ACri 12.286 15 Look at this forlorn caravan of travellers who wander over Europe dumb,-never exchange a word, in the mother tongue of either, with prince or peasant;...
    ACri 12.290 17 What the poet omits exalts every syllable that he writes. In good hands it will never become sterility.
    ACri 12.291 13 Never say, I beg not to be misunderstood.
    ACri 12.292 14 Never use the word development...
    MLit 12.314 15 A man may say I, and never refer to himself as an individual;...
    MLit 12.315 4 The great never with their own consent become a load on the minds they instruct.
    MLit 12.315 10 The great never hinder us;...
    MLit 12.316 12 The water we wash with never speaks of itself...
    MLit 12.319 17 Shelley, though a poetic mind, is never a poet.
    MLit 12.323 12 To look at [Goethe] one would say there was never an observer before.
    MLit 12.323 19 There was never man more domesticated in this world than [Goethe].
    MLit 12.324 10 ...[Goethe] never stopped at surface...
    MLit 12.326 27 [Goethe] has an eye constant to the fact of life and that never pauses in its advance.
    MLit 12.327 2 ...the great felicities, the miracles of poetry, [Goethe] has never.
    MLit 12.330 22 The limits of artificial society are never quite out of sight [in Wilhelm Meister].
    MLit 12.330 26 We are never lifted above ourselves [in Wilhelm Meister]...
    MLit 12.331 22 Poetry is with Goethe thus external...but the Muse never assays those thunder-tones which cause to vibrate the sun and the moon...
    WSL 12.337 21 [John Bull] has never seen a good horse in America...
    WSL 12.339 4 Bolivar, Mina and General Jackson will never be greater soldiers than Napoleon and Alexander, let Mr. Landor think as he will;...
    WSL 12.339 27 Before a well-dressed company [Landor] plunges his fingers into a cesspool, as if to expose the whiteness of his hands and the jewels of his ring. Afterward, he washes them in water, he washes them in wine; but you are never secure from his freaks.
    WSL 12.344 26 [Landor] draws with evident pleasure the portrait of a man who never said anything right and never did anything wrong.
    WSL 12.347 25 [Landor] never stoops to explanation...
    WSL 12.348 16 [Landor] is too wilful, and never abandons himself to his genius.
    Pray 12.351 22 Wacic the Caliph...ended his life...with these words: O thou whose kingdom never passes away, pity one whose dignity is so transient.
    Pray 12.352 12 ...thou, O my Father, knowest I always delight to commune with thee in my lone and silent heart; I am never full of thee; I am never weary of thee;...
    Pray 12.353 16 Shall we never ask the aim of all this hurry and foam...
    AgMs 12.362 16 ...as for the Major [Abel Moore], he never got rich by his skill in making land produce, but in making men produce.
    EurB 12.377 20 [The Vivian Greys] never sleep, go nowhere, stay nowhere, eat nothing, and know nobody...
    PPr 12.388 8 [Carlyle] has the dignity of a man of letters, who...never deviates from his sphere;...
    PPr 12.388 16 One excellence [Carlyle] has in an age of Mammon and of criticism, that he never suffers the eye of his wonder to close.
    PPr 12.388 21 ...[Carlyle] never wrote one dull line.
    PPr 12.390 22 Carlyle's style is the first emergence of all this wealth and labor with which the world has gone with child so long. London and Europe...and America...have never before been conquered in literature.
    PPr 12.390 27 How like an air-balloon or bird of Jove does [Carlyle] seem to float over the continent, and, stooping here and there, pounce on a fact as a symbol which was never a symbol before.
    PPr 12.391 4 [Carlyle's style] is the first experiment, and something of rudeness and haste must be pardoned to so great an achievement. It will be done again and again, sharper, simpler; but fortunate is he who did it first, though never so giant-like and fabulous.
    PPr 12.391 7 We have never had anything in literature so like earthquakes as the laughter of Carlyle.
    Let 12.396 27 To live solitary and unexpressed is...painful in proportion to one's consciousness of ripeness and equality to the offices of friendship. But herein we are never quite forsaken by the Divine Providence.
    Let 12.403 25 Apathies and total want of work...never will obtain any sympathy if there is a wood-pile in the yard...
    Let 12.404 23 The pruning in the wild gardens of Nature is never forborne.
    Trag 12.405 2 He has seen but half the universe who never has been shown the house of Pain.
    Trag 12.408 13 ...the antique tragedy, which was founded on this faith [in destiny], can never be reproduced.
    Trag 12.415 21 The market-man never damned the lady because she had not paid her bill...
    Trag 12.415 24 The market-man never damned the lady because she had not paid her bill, but the stout Irishman has to take that once a month. She, however, never feels weakness in her back because of the slave-trade.

never-broken, adj. (1)

    DSA 1.119 16 ...the never-broken silence with which the old bounty goes forward has not yielded yet one word of explanation.

nevermore, adv. (1)

    PI 8.61 20 Ah, sir, said Merlin [to Sir Gawaine]...when you shall have departed from this place, I shall nevermore speak to you...

Content (Text): Copyright © 2005 by Charlotte York Irey
Coding (HTML): Copyright © 2005 by Bradley P. Dean

All Rights Reserved

Back to Emerson Concordance home
Special Collections home
Library home